« .. 4... . J.*.,,;i . I. xi... 4A...,,.-.t_ "._.,...jt.>.rY..... . ....mot,.... 0 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 14, 1987 Students' tattoos be( (Continued from Page 1) Tattoos don't have to be blurry battleships or hearts with "MOM" draped across the front, and getting one doesn't have to be painful, Fauser said. There are still a lot of poor- quality tattoos, she said, and "the number of true artists who are doing it, like myself, is pretty small." CUSTOMERS, who must first make an appointment, can choose one of the patterns in the shop, or. they can bring in their own. Jim, an LSA junior who did not want his last name to be used, had a picture from an ancient Greek vase tattooed on his leg at, Suzanne's. "It's a woman pulling her hair out at funeral," he said. Fauser thinks one reason for the upsurge in interest in tattoos is that "more musicians are getting tattoos." Fauser said she always serves one type of student, though. Frater- nity members come from all over to have their houses' initials etched onto their bodies. "I've tattooed Fijis and Sigma Chis" from the University, she said. SOME STUDENTS even give themselves tattoos. LSA junior Ben Sowers tattooed a lizard on his ankle. "You take a needle and wrap string around the needle up to the point," Sowers explained as he rolled his sock down to reveal a crudely drawn stick figure. After drawing a pattern on the desired surface, he said, "Dip the needle in India ink. Jab the needle in at it. You have to do it over and over again" at all points along the pattern. "If the skin bleeds, that's a come a pai good sign that the tattoo is taking," Sowers said. Sowers suggests keeping the surface clean with rubbing alcohol to prevent infection. Hepatitis is a danger of home tattooing. Once the decision to be tattooed is made, the question of which part of the body to have tattooed comes up. Fauser said most women choose their breasts, hips, or ankles, while men favor their arms. RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE sophomore Nicole Pinsky chose her ankle because the skin doesn't change shape over time, and be- cause it can be covered up in certain situations." That tattoos do have to be hidden at times indicates a social stigma attached to them. Some students worry what parents will say. "My parents kind of bugged me about it at first," said LSA junior Jim Reisch. "Some people think it's disgusting," he added. Reisch got a tattoo of a dragon curled around a guitar by some biker buddies during a drunken escapade ("It's kind of a cliched story")., So why do they do it? "It makes me feel like I exist," said Pinsky of her tattoo. "I tried dying my hair blue for a couple of years, but that just didn't prove there was a me." She says she is now planning to have a starfish tattooed on a shoulder. "EACH TATTOO fits a person's personality, and it reflects them," said Karen, an art school junior. She has four tattoos, inclu- ding a lizard on her shoulder that matches the lizard her boyfriend Ron hason his ankle. "It's a union," she explained. "It's stuck on us for life." Permanence may deter some people from getting tattoos, but for those who have them, it's a powerful attraction.- of them POLICE NOTES Boy commits suicide A 17-year-old Huron High School student jumped to his death from the top level of the Tally Hall parking structure Friday morning, police said. Wendell Stubor died later that norning at the University Hospital. Rape arraignment ddayed The arraignment of a resident of 707 Oxford on rape charges has been postponed until tomorrow, police said. The arraignment was to have been yesterday, but the suspect requested the delay because he is out of town. -By David Webster Resolution prevents Republican veto IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Shultz, Shevardnadze confer MOSCOW - U. S. Secretary of State George Shultz held three rounds of talks yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, taking up the critical issue of nuclear arms reductions at an unscheduled late night session. There was no immediate word on the outcome. At the California White House, meanwhile, presidential Chief of Staff Howard Baker said he would not be surprised to see a decision on a superpower summit emerge by the end of Shultz' three day visit. The Soviet news agency Tass, however, accused Washington of "a fresh cock-and-bull story," of Soviet espionage at the U. S. Embassy in Moscow. The dispatch said the Pentagon came up with the "spy scare" in an effort to undercut the State Department. Charles Redman , the State Department spokesperson, said Shultz and Shevardnadze brought their arms control experts to the evening meeting. Texaco files for bankruptcy NEW YORI - Texaco gained ground in its multibillion-dollar legal war with Penzoil Co. by filing for protection under federal bankruptcy laws, analysts said yesterday. In taking the step, Texaco relieved itself of the necessity of posting a potentially debilitating security bond against the roughly $11 billioh judgement won by Penzoil against Texaco in a 1985 Houston jury decision. That removed a negotiating club that Penzoil had been wielding over Texaco, giving the White Plains, N. Y.-based giant oil company plenty of time to negotiate a settlement, they said. This benefits Texaco because the more time it has, the more chance it has of winning a reversal of the decision, and the more time Penzoil has to wait to get its money, or some part of the award. Earth's population increases WASHINGTON - The rate at which people are being born is speeding up again, just as the planet's population edges past the S billion milestone, a population study group reported yesterday. The private Population Reference Bureau cited an easing of strict birth limits in China as a prime reason for the turnaround in population growth. The Bureau's new World Population Data Sheet for 1987 estimates' that the July 1 population of the world will be 5.026 billion. The United Nations has projected that the world will pass the 5 billion milestoneearly in July, while another private study group , The Population Institute , calculated the event occurred last year. "If Beijing continues contunues to ease up on its population policy, it will shatter current assumptions about a continuing slowdown in the global population's growth rate," said bureau specialist Carl Haub. AMA calls for new morality. DETROIT - The president of the American Medical Association yesterday called for a new morality to combat the spread of AIDS but said doctor-patient confidentiality hinders physicians' ability to protect people whose partners may have the deadly disease. "If people out there are having multiple sexual experiences and going, to houses of prostitution, they're playing Russian roulette," said Dr. John Coury, the Port Huron surgeon who heads AMA. "What we're talking about is preventing death." Coury, at a news conference before addressing the Economic Club of Detroit, said past efforts to impose moral standards to prevent the spread of disease had failed because the stakes were not as high as they are now. I 4 14 (Continued from Page 1) the study, which was approved by the council last February over Republican opposition. In other action last night, Jernigan was sworn in as mayor, and Ann Marie Coleman (D-First Ward), Terry Martin (R-Second Michigan Daily ARTS 763-0379 Ward), Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward), Jerry Schleicher (R-Fourth Ward), and Kathy Edgren (D-Fifth Ward) were sworn in as representatives of Ann Arbor's five wards. Epton, who was re-elected for his third term, proposed that the council seat Jernigan vacated be filled by resolution at next week's city council meeting. He indicated that Dave DeVarti, chairman of the Ann Arbor Democratic Party and a two-time unsuccessful candidate for the council, will probably fill the position. 4 r Attention Everyone Want to be a part of the most happening place this summer? Join the staff of the spring/summer Daily. We need reporters, and we know you can do it. Come to the mass meeting Friday, April 17 at 4:00 pm. We are located at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard St. See you there. 4 HOPWOOD AWARDS The Kasdan Scholarship in Creative Writing The Arthur Miller Award The Jeffrey L: Weisberg Freshman Poetry Award will be announced Wed., April 15 at 4 p.m. Rackham Auditorium Open to the Public We're truly A Class Act Come Celebrate on Apil 16th at the U-Club from 4-8 pm Free refreshments and Drink Specials EXTRAS Alligator residing in Georgia pond concerns suburbanites POWDER SPRINGS, Ga. (AP) - A five-foot alligator that moved into a pond behind the Lake Emerald subdivision may have been a pet that outgrew its welcome, says a professional trapper called in to snare the critter. Richard Gruhn of the Immediate Animal Service planted a steel trap baited with chicken during the weekend, explained that "We want to catch him live." Gruhn has trapped bears and deer while working for the service that specializes in animal rescue and wildlife control, but he said the suburban gator hunt "takes the cake." Although nobody claims to know where the alligator came from, Gruhn said, "My theory is that somebody had an alligator as a pet, and it got so big that they couldn't keep it anymore, so they let it go." If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. Vol. XCVHl -No. 133 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through' Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub - scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. L e c t u r e b y 4 A rrr SUMMER IN CHICAGO AT IIT JOYCE CARL OATES Author of: EXPENSIVE PEOPLE, THEM, CHILDWOLD, MARYA: A LIFE, RAVEN'S WING FOR 131 WAYS TO: 2 Get a head start Fill prerequisites Make up a course Speed up graduation 11 I i i I I Editor in Chief ......................ROB EARLE Managing Editor ..................AMY MINDELL News Editor ..............PHILIP I. 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Business Manager..................MASON FRANKLIN Sales Manager...............DIANE BLOOM Finance Manager .......REBECCA LAWRENCE Classified Manager .............GAYhE SHAPIRO Assistant Sales Manager ........ANNE KUBEK Assistant Classified Manger AMY EIGES DISPLAY SALES: Karen Brown, lrit Elrad, Missy Hambrick, Ginger Heyman, Denise Levy, Wendy Lewis, Jodi Manchik, Laura Martin, Mindy Mendontsa, Scott Metcalf, Carolyn Rands, Jackie Rosenburg, Todd " 131 undergraduate or graduate courses to choose from -8 week summer session-June 15 to August 8 * Day and evening classes - Convenient locations - Main Campus, lIT West and Extension Centers * Ample FREE parking I; WMEMEMEMENIMI IN i I