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March 06, 1984 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1984-03-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

City council makes April

The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 6, 1984 - Page 3

MF

.S. I

I'
Rape Prevention
By CAROLINE MULLER the Citizen's Advisory Committee on P
The Ann Arbor City Council last night Rape Prevention which asked for the c
oted unaniously to declare April Rape vote, said it hopes to educate groups a
J'revention Month. who would usually not hear about rape th
One reason April was chosen was to prevention, such as fraternities, s
help bring attention to the "Take Back sororities, and civic clubs. t
}he Night" rally on April 25, a protest Beth Reed, another committee mem- P
,imed at making people more aware of ber, said the group hopes to work on
sexual assaults against women. preventing assaults by reaching not C
SUSAN MCGEE, spokeswoman for only groups of young women, but other to
th
D,
A
A
U
HA.PPENI.NGSs

Month'
potential victims such as the disabled,
children, and the elderly. Reed, and an
associate professor of social work, said
he group also hopes to increase the
ensitivity of men to rape, in an attempt
to stop future assaults before they hap-
en.
The committee, formed by City
ouncil in July, 1981, includes represen-
atives from the Assault Crisis Center,
he Women's Crisis Center, the
lomestice Violence Project, the Ann
rbor Coalition Against Rape, the Ann
rbor Policed Department, the city, the
rniversity and primary and secondary
>hools in the area.
THE COUNCIL also heard, but did
ot act on a proposal to establish a cen-
er for drug-dependent adolescents in
he city.
Helen Berg, of the Catherine
UcAuley Health Center, cited statistics
howing a 300 percent increase in the
uicide rate of chemically-dependent
dolescents over the last five years.
She also said that 14 percent of
eenagers between the age of 14 and 17
re "heavy drinkers."
"Alpha House," the name of the
roposed program would be modeled
fter abuse treatment programs in
dinnesota and Ohio, she said.

I;

Highlight
The School of Education is offering a seminar on "Reforming the
Curriculum: Is the Answer Mandated Requirements? More Time? Con-
tent? or What?", tonight at 7 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the
CRackham Building. The seminar is the second in the school's series on,
"Searching For Excellence: Educational Reforms for the Eighties."
Films
Cinema Guild-The 22nd Ann Arbor Film Festival, 7, 9, & 11 p.m.,
Michigan Theater.
Performances
Union Arts-dance series, UM Dancers & Christopher Flynn, Pendleton
Rm., Union, 12:15 p.m.; Concert of the Month, clarinetist Mary Crum, music
of Poulenc, Satie, Saint-Saens, 8 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union.
UAC/Impact Jazz Dance-dance workshop, 7 p.m.
School of Music-University Choir, 8 p.m., Hill Aud., Music for organ &
other instruments, 8 p.m. Studio 2110, String Dept. Recital, 8 p.m., Recital
Hall.
Eclipse Jazz Lecture Series-Charles Mingus & Rahsaan Roland Kirk-
Theodore Grenier, Studio B, WUOM, LSA Bldg., 7:30 p.m. Jazz Films will be
shown at the same time in MLB 3.
Musical Society-Oakland Ballet, 8 p.m. Power Center.
Ark-Cathy Winter, 8 p.m., the Ark.
Joe's Star Lounge-Disband, 109 N. Main.
Speakers
Rackham; Cont. Ed. Alumnae Assoc.; Office of Affirmative Ac-
tion-Vivian Shapiro, "The Dual Role of Women," 2:30 p.m. Rackham
Assembly Hall.
CRLT-Alfred Storey, "Speaking Skills," 7- p.m., CLRT.
Psychobiology-KennedyCasey, "Central Pain Mechanisms & Path-
ways," 12&30 p.m., 1057 MHRI.
English-June Howard, "Narrated Perelysis & Narrative Discontinutiy in
American Literary Naturalism," 8 p.m., W. Conf. Rm., Rackham.
Museum of Art-Art Break, Barbara Hamel, "Nineteenth Century pain-
tings," 12:10p.m., Museumof Art.
Ecumenical Campus Center-Jeffrey Broadbent, "Japan's Peace
Movement," discussion and slide show, noon, International Ctr., 603 E.
Madison.
Overseas Opportunities Office-Marilyn Rosenthal, "Comparative Health
Care Systems-London & Stockholm Summer Study Abroad Program," 7:30
p.m., International Ctr.
Chemistry-Mans Bock, "Mixed Pickles 1983 from Frankfurt," 4 p.m.,
1300 Chem.
UIiese Studies-Fred Teiwes, "Leadership & Legitimacy in the People's
Republic of Chin'a,"'4 p.m., Lane Hall Commons Rm., Yi-tsi Mei Feuer-.
werker, "Author! Author! Author? What is a (Modern Chinese) Author?",
noon, Lane Hall Commons.
English Lang. & Lit.-Mary Kinzie, "The Rhapsodic Fallacy," W. Conf.
Rm., 4 p.m., Rackham, Reading, E. Lee. Rm., 8 p.m., Rackham.
Soundings-Mindy Smith, "Health Issues After Thirty," First
Presbyterian Church, 7:30 p.m., 1413 Wash. Ave.
Center For Russian & E. European Studies-Branko Momcilovic, "The
Reception of American Literature in Yugoslavia," Conf. Rm., 4 p.m.,
Rackham.
Rudolph Steiner Inst. of the Great Laes Area-E. Katz, "The Lemurian &
Atlantean Catastrophes," 8p.m., 1923 Geddes.
Statistics-Bradley Efron, "Bootstrap Confidence Intervals," 4 p.m., 13
Angell Hall.
Meetings
Ann Arbor Go CLub -7 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall.
His House Christian Fellowship-Bible Study & Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., 925
E. Ann SDt.
Amnesty International -7 p.m., Union.
Miscellaneous
Career Planning & Placement-"Making Your Decision Count: The Con-
sequences of a Liberal Arts Education," 4 p.m., Angell Hall.
CEW-Job Hunt Club-noon, 350S. Thayer.
U-M Fencing Club-8 p.m., Coliseum, corner of Hill & 5th.
Matthaei Botanical Gardens-course on morel mushrooms taught by
Nancy Smith Weber, 7:15 p.m., 1800 Dixboro Rd.
Rackham, LSA; Western European Studies; Vistorian Semester
'84-"The Poaching Life" videotape, noon, 12:30 p.m., Rm. 6, Angell Hall.
Human Resource Dev.-Communication Skills Programs, "Pun-
ctuation . . : Clinic!", 1 p.m., Rm. 4052, LSA Bldg., "For Managers/Super-
visors,"8:30 a.m., Rm. 130, LSA Bldg.
Michigan Union-art exhibition and sale, 8 p.m., Pond rooms, Union.

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AP Photo
P.Y.T.
Maya Russell, 12, displays dancing talent Saturday during a Michael Jackson look-alike contest at the Free Public
Library in Louisville, Ky.

Former law student
hangs self in carport

A former University law student
committed suicide Saturday by
hanging himself in a stairwell at the
Thompson Street carport, according to
Walter Stevens, director of the Univer-
sity's Safety Department.
John Warren Davis, 24, was found at
3:45 p.m. Saturday between the sixth
and seventh levels of the carport. A
suicide note found later confirmed that
the death was self-inflicted.

Although Davis had enrolled for the
fall term as a first-year law student, he
withdrew from school earlier this year.
Three University students and one
other former student have committed
suicide this academic year. A 19-year-
old student hung himself in January,
and Walt Stevens said two other students
committed suicide in the later half of 1983.
- Rachel Gottlieb

DID YOU KNOW..
that Speech and Hearing Clinician
is ranked fourth in the "Top Ten"
growth professions for the decade
ahead by the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics? If you would like to work
with children or adults who have
speech or language problems, you
should go with the trend. Look us up
under the Psychology Speech & Hear-
ing Science Program in the LSA Bul-
letin and make an appointment with
one of our advisors at the Office of
Academic Counseling.

Two women assaulted
Two University students were
assaulted over the weekend, according
to Ann Arbor police. The first assault
occurred at 2 a.m. Sunday, when a man
described as 5 feet 8 inches tall entered
the unlocked apartment of a 20-year-old
student, and then went into her
bedroom. Police said the man touched
her leg, but fled when the woman began
kicking and screaming. In the other
assault, at 5:15 p.m. Sunday, a man
described as 6 feet tall forced a 19-year-
old student who was walking by Burton
Tower into an MLB restroom. The man
allegedly made her strip, began fon-
dling her, and then fled, police said.
- Rachel Gottlieb
---- -"

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