Therapist modi fies Ogame for disab led By DAVID SCHWARTZ For the first time, an adapin of r video game enables quadri 'egics t, play games for themselves, Whanks to a University therapist. At a press conference yesterday, Activity Therapist Nicholas Kolokithas unveiled an adaptation of the "Wizard of Wor" game that he developed with engineer Daniel Koester. With a joystick and a tube mounted to a pole that can be at- tached to a wheelchair, the device al- lows quadriplegics to bypass the game's control panel. Quadriplegics are paralyzed from the neck down. As Brian West, a 23-year old Ann Arbor resident, demonstrated yester- day, patients maneuver the stick with their chins. Sucking on the tube moves the figures, and blowing into it fires the figure's guns. West was rendered a quadriplegic eight years ago when he broke his neck doing a BMX bike stunt. The tube is similar to a straw quadriplegics use to operate electric wheelchairs. The game is located in the Activ- ity Center of Mott Hospital, where Kolokithas works. "We try to give them as many stimulating things, things that they want to do, in this room," he said, "This is their time Pto get away." "I don't have to watch. I can come in (to the Activity Center) and enjoy the room," West said. "It makes being in the hospital a lot better. It's relaxation. It's very im- portant to me." Kolokithas first, thought of modifying a video game three years ago when "a friend of mine told me that it was impossible," he said. 'That really gets me going." He said hospitals nationwide should get video games for quadriplegics. "The thing about re- hab is to normalize life. By giving quads video games, it normalizes life for them," he said. CAMPUS R GOEBEL 1/2 Barrel N $28.95 E + Deposit + Tax R OFFER EXPIRES 10/26/87 1665-44311 818 S. STATE, ANN ARBOR OPEN TIL MIDNIGHT SUN-THURS 2AM FRI & SAT WEEKEND- MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 The Michigan Daily-,-Friday, October 23, 1987- Page 3 State may aid local homeless By ALYSSA LUSTIGMAN The Ann Arbor Shelter Associa- tion may receive part of a $868,000 grant from the Michigan State Housing Development Authority if its application is accepted. Cathy Zick, director of Ann Ar- bor's Shelter Association for the Homeless, said her organization will submit an application for the grant in the near future. In August, the Huron Street shelter, which houses up to 50 individuals every night, re- ceived a $35,000 grant from the de- velopment authority. If the shelter receives the new grant money, it will go towards op- erational costs such as maintenance, staffing, and cleaning, Zick. said. "We try to work on a statewide level in funding the homeless, but we also receive funds from city, county, and local government,"Zick said. "There is a lack of affordable housing in this area, and a fairly largeproblem with homelessness for a community this size," she added. "This is often because students take up what housing there is in the area that would be available for our ten- ants." City Council member Cathy Ed- gren (D-Fifth Ward) agreed that there is "a' problem with the homeless in Ann Arbor." "Emergency shelter has been our highest priority of human service funding for two years," she said. Some are worried that the home- less predicament will grow worse with the onset of winter. "As the weather gets cooler, the problem will be more serious," said Council member Ann Marie Coleman (D- First Ward). "The situation isn't as obvious in the summer." "Many shelters are at capacity," Edgren said. "We have to work on not just housing people, but helping them move out."~ The money is part of a $2 mil- lion federal grant, $1.2 million of which has already been assigned to counties outside of Washtenaw county. - The Associated Press con- tributed to this report. Need a lift? Race official Will McClure waited out a rainstorm yesterday afternoon inside the official Dodge car of the National Collegiate Driving Championships. The rain delay caused the Ann Arbor stop of the NCDC tour, held in the Crisler Arena parking lot, to be extended through today. Stocks drop after slight recovery (ContinuedfroPagel1) London, wiping out more than two- thirds of the gains in Wednesday's record trading. In an unusual step, the New York and American stock exchanges announcedyesterday they would shorten each of their next three trading sessions by two hours to process the crushing volume of the last week. The New York exchange processed almost 2.5 billion shares in the past week, said NYSE Chair John Phelan. The exchanges will close at 2 p.m. today, Monday, and Tuesday, and will open as usual at 9:30 a.m. At one point yesterday, the Dow was down 140 points and bobbed violently afterward at sharply lower levels. "The market's extremely fragile," said Peter DaPuzzo, manager of the retail equity group at Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc. in New York. "Any negative news causes it to break and people to sell out equities. There's so much tension a n d nervousness, the confidence level is very close to zero." The value of all U.S. stocks fell $107.79 billion, wiping out nearly half the recovery of the previous two days, according to the Wilshire Associates 5,000 Equity Index of stocks. MAC IN THE MORNING MAC IN THE EVENING MAC AROUND THE CLOCK kinko's MACINTOSH CENTER *FULL-SERVICE LASERSETTING " RESUME SPECIALS 540 EAST LIBERTY STREET ANN ARBOR Corner of Liberty and Maynard 761-4539 Africa: Realizing the Dream A One-Day Conference Exploring Problems and Prospectives for Africa Saturday, October 24,1987, 9:30am to 3:30pm at the Michigan League, Library Room, Third Floor 9:30 am: Coffee will be served 10:00 am: Morning Session Starts Speakers: Dr. Peter Walsh on "Militarization in South and Central Africa" Dr. Mutombo Mpanya on "The Effects of War on Food Distribution Systems" Dr. David Bower on "Reports from Mozambique" 12:00 noon: Break For Lunch in Michigan Leage Cafeteria Afternoon Speaker: Dr. Robin Barlow wi "A Critical Response" 2:30 pm: Concluding Panel and Discussion "Putting the Pieces Together" with Moderator Dr. Nile Harper and Guest Speakers } I t rra. " cc i r AIL t t l The Office Of Major Events Presents THE PAUL WINTER CONSORT Charge by Phone 763-TKTS Tickets available at the Michigan Union Ticket Office and all -a outlets. Sunday, November 8 7:30 p.m. Power Center " Flexible evening hours - 763-7420 " 611 Church Street 3rd floor Z U Where can you find a climate that supports individual MERRILL LYNCH & CO., INC. Will Conduct An Information Session for the CONSUMER MARKETS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM on Nnrvmhpr 1q1487 I a ,maanmmmmesa ms-