4 Page 10-- The Michigan Daily - Monday, Septenber 19, 1988 Married... with children BY LAURA COHN Painted concrete walls and com- munity bathrooms are among the hallmarks of campus housing. Thousands of first-year students are shuttled in each year, and most move out by their junior year. Most students' first taste of the real world is settling into their first off-campus apartment. But for those who live in the University's married housing, real life starts on campus. The 1,700 Family Housing De- velopment units, on both Central and North Campus, are home to over 1,000 married and single-parent families. And most of them contend with cooking, cleaning, and raising children - as well as their studies. "There's such a strong sense of community," said Joanne Brzinski, a Family housing is much more like 'real life' 26-year-old Rackham graduate stu- dent. "There are so many kids around, so I don't have to worry about letting my son ride his bike outside." Brzinski is living in a family housing unit at Northwood with her husband and five-year-old son. The atmosphere is friendly, she said, and families often get together for activities such as pot-luck dinners. Mike Bressler, a Rackham gradu- ate student, said living in University Terrace with his wife is a good alternative to off-campus housing. "The rent is lower and the conditions are overall better than living in an apartment somewhere in Ann Ar- bor," he said. To live in married housing, an undergraduate must carry at least eight credit hours, and a graduate student must carry at least six credit hours. Married students must present their marriage certificate, and stu- dents with children must present birth certificates. University staff may also live in married housing, but only after all eligible students have been housed. The .married housing develop- ment, built in 1985, provides com- munity activities as well as homes for its residents. An English lan- guage program for foreign students, courtyard volleyball games, and pre- school groups have helped the resi- dents get to know one other, the students say. Eric Luskin, director of family housing, has specific objectives in mind for the project. "We have a goal to make this a special commu- nity in addition to supporting the academic mission of the university," he said. Eight community aides are pro- vided to help married students adjust to their new life on campus. The social life in married housing, Bressler said, is necessarily different from that in the dormitories. B urma Ha*t* Continued from Page 1 Paul, who has been indicted on federal drug trafficking charges in Miami, had been considered the most powerful figure in Haiti after Nam- phy. It was not known if Paul played a role in the coup, but sources said Namphy and Paul were at odds. In Washington, State Department spokesperson Anita Stockman said noncomissioned officers of the Pre- sidential Guard captured Namphy in an apparently bloodless coup and persuaded Avril to take over. She said they were believed to be "dissatisfied with recent human rights violations and the general deterio- ration in the security situation punc- tuated by attackes against the chur- ches over the past two weeks." Stockman said Avril phoned the U.S. ambassador and said he was assuming the presidency. She said the U.S. government still wants Paul to answer the drug trafficking charges in court. Namphy arrived in a private plane at a private airport in Santo Domin- go, the Dominican capital, early Sunday morning, said Fabio Herrera Cabral, deputy foreign minister of the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispanola with Haiti. The Dominican Republic said Namphy and Port-au-Prince Mayor Franck Romain were granted political asylum in its embassy in Port-au- Prince. Romain was a colonel in the Presidential Guard and chief of police under Duvalier. Sources who spoke on condition of anonymity said the fighting involved army factions and members of the Tonton Macoutes, the dreaded agents that terrorized Haitians during the 29-year dictatorships of the Duvalier family. Detials were not known. Continued from Page 1 Solidarity CZESTOCHOWA, Poland gather at a pro-Solidarity yesterday. - Over 50,000 Polish workers labor union, rally at a monastery I dott want a lot of hype. I just want something I can count on-l the government's count. A later broadcast named the other 18 military officers in the com- mittee, including the army, navy, and air force commanders, eight of Burma's nine regional army com- manders, and the unpopular military intelligence chief, Col. Khin Nyunt. The broadcast said all government and state bodies were dissolved, including local administrations. Striking government workers were told to return to work by Sept. 26 or face dismissal. The initial broadcast, preceded by martial music, said the military took over state authority "to curb further deterioration of the general situation in the country." MPAs Continued from Page 1 _ These advisers act as a resources for both students and residence staff, said Karen Gulley, MPA for Mosher Jordan Hall. "I want to increase awareness (about ethnic culture) for all individuals," she said. Together, the councils and the peer advisers organize programs that typify the culture and interests of various ethnic groups. SISTER (Sisters In Stockwell Transmitting Ethnic Relations) has an annual seminar on Black female- male relationships, while CAMM (Counsel for Advancement of Mi- norities in Mosher Jordan) sponsors the poetry readings of Native Americans. Although the primary audience of the councils are minority students, activities are not limited only to minorities. 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