w a 0 0 Barrier from Page 1 Cooley is one of the 52 handicapped students registered with the Univer- sity's Disabled Student Services (DSS) office. But DSS director Jim Kubaiko said the number could be much higher because registering with the office is voluntary. With disabilities ranging from deaf- ness or blindness to quadripeligia, not only do handicapped University studen- ts face physical obstacles on campus, but sometimes a hardened, insensitive attitude from professors and other students. M ARJORIE MINOR, another handicapped student, says she never walks across the Diag. Minor is blind and says walking along pathways that aren't straight can be confusing. "If there are diagonal sidewalks - and this campus is full of them - you can very easily get off in the wrong way. If I try the Diag, who knows where I'll end up," she says with a giggle. Minor lost her sight after a six-month battle with glaucoma when she was 11. Today, the LSA senior uses a guide dog to find her way from home to campus and from class to class. Although Minor has learned to accept her disability, some of her professors have not. "Some instructors are nervous about having students who are disabled in class," says Minor. One professor was reluctant to let Minor tape-record his lectures because he feared she might sell the recordings. Making a profit from a professor's lecture would probably be a lot easier than the lengths blind students must take to understand the material. Blind students spend several hours each day transcribing lectures on Braille typewriters. They also must hire people to read their textbooks aloud to them. Most disabled students also don't take full classloads. Minor, for exam- ple, says she usually registers for only two courses a term. Hearing impaired students, like Cooley, who has only 9 credit hours, hurry to find front row seats in lectures shoulders down and bound to a wheelchair. And for him, accessibility to buildings has become a major con- cern. Today, whether he can get to his classes on North Campus in the School of Architecture and Urban Planning depends on a building's accessibility. If there isn't a ramp, Komar is in trouble. And he says-too many buildings on campus are not adequately equipped for handicapped students. Compared to facilities at other universities such as Michigan State and the University of California at Berkeley, the University is lagging behind. "Compared to the way (the Univer- sity) excells in other areas, it is lacking terribly (in accessibility)," Komar says. In the past five years handicapped students have filed complaints against the University for not being accessible enough. One complaint filed with the Department of Education several years ago charged that the University denied handicapped students the same oppor- tunities in academic programs because disabled students could not get to cer- tain buildings. The individual wanted a separate bus system for handicapped students because standard University buses are not equipped for wheelchairs. And last September the University initiated a special bus system for disabled students which will cost about $30,000 a year according to Kubaiko, the DSS director. But the University was one of the last schools to get a special bus system. Both MSU and Berkeley have had long-established handicapped bus ser- vices. The University isn't light years behind its peers, said Kubaiko, but it certainly hasn't taken a leadership role. "(The University) hasn't aggressively recruited students with disabilities or gone out of its way to make the campus accessible." Though University administrators say the high cost of renovations is a deterrent, handicapped students say their reluctance is partly an attitude problem. Insensitivity among both students and professors is commonplace, accor- ding to Jim Luckey, a blind graduate r COVER STORY Handicapped students Page 1 From walking across the Diag to finding a professor's office, disabled students face problems far more basic than those who face only next week's midterm. Their battle against barriers is compoun- ded by a University that often treats them more as a nagging irritation than a priority. Cover photo by Doug McMahon. FILM Thriller flick Pages 4 & 5 Before Michael Jackson, thriller meant the kind of movie where you sat on the edge of your seat, not sure if you wanted to see the next scene and scream or just cover your eyes. Alfred Hitchcock, the master of the suspense film, is featured this week, along with one of his best films, Vertigo. Also, Bob Dylan's Don't Look Back, which shows his 1965 England tour, hits the screen. DISCS Reincarnated rock Page 6 The music comes alive although the artist is long gone - John Lennon's voice still rings out over the radio and stereos, better than ever. Catch the review on the husband-wife album (John and Yoko, that is) also, Milk and Honey. THE LIST Happenings Pages 7-10 Your personal guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film Capsules, music previews, theater notes, and bar dates, all listed for you in a handy-dandy, day-by-day schedule. And this week there's more information about food around town. THEATER MUSIC First class Ann Arbor will be one o experience the combinatic the Vienna Philharmori this week why this combinr FEATURES What's so curiou George? And what were the se spoken on T.V.? George C '60s and '70s, will give Ai routines this weekend. A Carlin plans to be as funny BOOKS A Greek odyssey A quest for revenge that civil war in Greece reache when a former New York ' one of his mother's executo Not quite Shakespeare Page 11 Tom Stoppard directs his two one act plays, Dogg's Hamlet and Cahoot's Macbeth. Dogg's Hamlet takes place in "Dogg" and in Dogg language and Cahoot's Macbeth is just as different. Find out what these two upcoming plays are really all about with this week's preview. C 0 O V O I-Y ^C Weekend Friday Februarv 10, 1984 Votime I Issue 16 Magazine Editor ................Mare Hodges Sales Manager ..............Debbie Dioguardai Assistant Sales Manager ............ Laurie Truske Accessible: A symbol of hope Weekend is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition of the Daily every week during the University year and is available for free at many locations around the campus and city. Weekend, (313) 763-0379 Daily, 764-0552; Circulatior tising, 764-0554. Copyright 1984, The Michig 'Some instructors are nervous about having students who are disabled in class.' - Marjorie Minor blind student two detached retinas and almost totally blind. "At that time in my life, the only thing I was into was athletics," he said. But Luckey's handicap has shifted his in- terests - and created new problems. "The attitude that I picked up from (professors) is that they were too busy (to be bothered)." At least Luckey has no problem fin- ding his professors-for Minor, even a trip to a professor's office poses a major problem. Finding the floor is relatively easy because there are Braille elevator buttons. But once off the elevator, things become more com- plicated. There are no Braille door numbers. "I've only been able to find two in- structors offices in all the years I've been here," Minor says. "It's a little touchy sometimes to ask a prof, 'Will you look for me out in the hallway?' " And somedays, even having a guide dog can be embarrassing, Minor says. Because the dog sheds a lot, Minor says people are always telling her she has dog hair all over her clothes. For students in wheelchairs, getting a flat tire can be a crisis. Engineering Senior Bob Hooper had to call his rom- mmate when his wheelchair had a flat. Hooper was injured in a diving ac-. cident shortly after the end of his freshman year. He nearly drowned. But Hooper says he isn't bitter abouthis paralysis, instead he sees it "as sort of challenging." The support of Hooper's fraternity brothers in Phi Delta Theta helped him adjust to his paralysis. "I have 70 fraternity brothers and they've made life a lot easier," says Hooper. "They've really been a great asset for the last three or four years." But right after the accident, Hooper said he felt self-conscious in a wheelchair. "You get to the point where you're always conscious of how people think of you. But that wears off pretty fast. I figure if I have a good attitude, people ought to have a good attitude towards me." Cooley's adjustment to his disability was not as, smooth as Hooper's. During high school and his first year at the University, Cooley said he lived in a fantasy world. Withdrawn and feeling little interest in making friends, he says he would often pretend he didn't see acquaintances on campus or between classes to avoid speaking to people. Living in West Quad during his fresh- man year was a disaster He simply didn't have the same social skills as his other peers. "I had a dif- ficult time enjoying myself." After that difficult first year, a traumatic incident in which Cooleyrwas hit by a car while crossing the street at the corner of South Forest and South University, brought him out of his shell. "I made a somersault and my hearing aids started flying," Cooley remembers. Although he wasn't seriously hurt, he says the accident made him aware of just how out of touch he was~with reality. "The impact of the car hitting me made me realize (there was a real world)," he says. But even today, in the real world, Cooley has problems - especially in social situations. Some of the most difficult and lonely times for Cooley are at parties when music is blaring and people are giggling and talking at once. Cooley says those situations are still frustrating and seem impossible to handle. "It's especially difficult at parties. It's almost impossible at parties. I'm quite limited at a party. Sometimes I'll go up to an individual and say 'hey, great weather we're having and they don't understand me," he says. Concentrating so hard to understand others and make himself underitood takes up most of his intellectual effort, Cooley says. "You put your creativity and imagination on the back burner. "I think being hearing impaired has more of an impact on social life than being blind." Cooley's barriers are primarily social ones, but for other handicapped students, social difficulties are only the SURPRISE!9 (DELIVERED) BIRTH DAY CAKE Call 668-6058 for a beautiful cake for your special friend. Dom Bakeries will deliver or you can pick it up at any of our 4 locations. 1. Please order at least 3 days in advance. 2. Add $5.00 for delivery. 3. We deliver M-F, between 2-6 P.M. 4. Please pay prior to, or at delivery. FILL OUT THIS ORDER FORM AND CALL 668-6058 I AYLP EXTRA VAGA L THURS., FEB. 9 - SAT ALL WINTE MERCHAND 50 - 70%io so they can see their professors' lips as they talk. But even with that extra ef- fort, deaf students still miss words. And students bound to wheelchairs like University graduate student Tom Komar have to arrange their schedules around their personal assistants who help them dress, bathe, and eat before classes. When Komar was an undergraduate student at Kent State University, he didn't pay much'att'ention to handicap- ped facilities on campus. He didn't need to. But today, after a severe car ac cident, Komar is paralyzed from the student. "I guess the major problem that I've encountered is just trying to com- municate to an individual professor that I am a visually impaired student and they say: 'Fine, what do you want me to do about it?" Luckey says. When Luckey asked one of his professors to allow him extra reading time di-r.ng tests. the orofessor asked Lucky for medical proof that he was senior Bob Hooper had to call his roo- Luckey was disabled while he was playing a football game as a high school freshman, and he was knocked against a goal post. The accident left him with a ai Lii Qi 8" Round - $ 7.90 9" Round - $ 8.90 10" Round - $10.90 1 Sheet - $ 7.90 1 Sheet - $11.90 Full Sheet - $19.90 CAKE - White Yellow Chocolate Cherry Chip . ai L0 AYLA 323S . Main St. 665-3699 AYLA FOR Nv 213 S. Main St. 769-6585 WHY NOT ORDER A DOZEN OF OUR DELICIOUS DONUTS, TQO! 14 Weekend/February 10, 19843W 3 Week