The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 27, 1989 - Page 3 Search pared down to four BY FRAN OBEID A permanent University Affirma- tive Action director could be named within a month, according to mem- bers of a search committee that has been meeting since September. The committee has recommended a list of four candidates, none of whom are from inside the Univer- sity, to University President James Duderstadt for his. final selection. Search officials would not release their names. "President Duderstadt wanted the position filled as close to the first of the year as possible," said committee member and Rackham graduate stu- dent Todd Shaw. "We need a strong leader who works well and who is concerned with diversity issues." Duderstadt's selection will replace interim Affirmative Action Director Mary Ann Swain, who is also assistant vice president for academic raffairs. afSwain replaced former director Virginia Nordby, who was promoted to associate vice president for gov- ernmental relations in June, but continued in the Affirmative Action office until November. "Four candidates were brought to campus for interviews," said Chair of the search committee and Assis- tant Vice President for Academic Affairs Colleen Dolan-Greene. "Several members of student groups also interviewed some of the candi- dates." i The search committee is com- posed of seven faculty members from various departments and two students appointed by the Michigan Student Assembly. Out of 150 ap- plicants, the committee determined about 40 were qualified for the posi- tion, and from that group the top four were sent to Duderstadt. He will either select one of the four or reject all the recommended candidates, which would start the search process over again. SPOLICE NOTES, Pizza Thief Two men robbed a Domino's pizza delivery person Wednesday night on the 500 block of Long Shore Drive, said Ann Arbor Police Sergeant Sherry Vail. The victim said one of the men was armed with a long piece of me- tal, according to the report. The suspects stole the pizza he was going to deliver and the money he was carrying. The suspects fled on foot after the robbery, Vail said. Vail said police are continuing to investigate the incident. By Monica Smith - Asian women discuss life in U.S. culture BY JENNIFER MILLER Asian American women often face a conflict between the demands of their traditional backgrounds and American culture, said students yes- terday during the first meeting held to bring South and East Asian women together. The Indian and Pakistani-Ameri- can Student Council sponsored the forum "to increase awareness of Asian women on campus and to cel- ebrate our culture," said group founder Dexa Patel, an LSA junior. Radhika Sharma, a group member and facilitator, began the meeting by recognizing that despite differences in Eastern and Southern cultures, there is a need to build upon similarities. "This coming together was the beginning of the binding of Asian women that will carry out goals," said Sharma, a Public Health gradu- ate student. The women met in workshop groups in which they discussed positive and negative experiences as Asian Americans. "I am proudest of our culture and the importance it puts on family and community sup- port. But I dislike the box that peo- ple put us in," said Sharma. The discussion groups, limited only to Asian Americans, gave the women a chance to vent their com- plaints and also celebrate being part of two cultures. The women noted a contrast be- tween what they saw as their more conservative heritage and the liberal American society. "Some people think I am tough because I don.'t show emotion as freely as some white Americans," said one participant. "In America, it is hard because you have to be part of the blonde-hair blue-eyed main- stream to be accepted." "There is a general arrogance among students at the University," said another participant. "I am used to everyone staring at me when I speak. But it is not just Asian stu- dents - it is any foreigner with an accent or different color skin." Sharma said the meeting, which about 20 people attended, helped create an awareness of the conflict between the two cultures. "Tonight was exciting because there was so much strong, open par- ticipation. In a University classroom dominated by white males these ideas and opinions don't come out," Sharma said. Getting a University response is one of the main goals of IPASC. "We want to build up the South Asian studies program," said Patel. "There has not even been a political science professor in the field for three years." IPASC was formed in August as a political awareness support group. Member Sree Nallamoth believes the group is succeeding. "It is going slow but we have strong people and ambitious ideas. We are getting closer and closer all the time." Hooky hockey Andy Klouck and Brent Rasmussen, pick-up hockey yesterday at Gallery ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily students at Ann Arbor Huron High School, play Park. Flotation therapy soothes BY MARK MENDELIS Imagine floating almost lifelessly in a giant white egg. Not a real egg, but an artificial one. Envision yourself in a capsule of total darkness and pure silence - except for your own body's life pro- cesses - floating in a special tem- perature-regulated saline solution in which your body and soul feel abso- lutely no gravity. In short, you are in an environ- ment in which there are no external stimuli, an environment in which your mind is free to concentrate solely on your mind's thoughts and nothing else. While this may sound like some bizarre dream, such an experience is yours for the taking if you are daring enough to visit Ann Arbor's Peak Performance Center. Recently opened, the center offers the latest innovations in "stress reduction, therapeutic message, and performance enhancement," with Re- stricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST) flotation tanks. The flotation tanks, as they are commonly referred to by owners Jo- celyn Granger and Mike Twigg, are large egg-like chambers filled with student b about 10 inches of water. Grang The tanks are sound and light trasensor proof when closed, and the water has to your1 been saturated with over 1100 pounds clearly< of Epson salts to ensure "total body problems buoyancy" during the typical hour- long sessions, according to Granger. Co-o By maintaining the water in each graduate, tank at a constant temperature of fit that " 93.5 degrees, the same temperature of you have the skin's surface, the body loses its Althoi sense of gravity, "effectively creating for onlyt a blank-out of the sense of touch, already pressure, fiction, and other skin sen- already C C sations," according to author Michael students, Hutchinson. The creation of such a sensation She sa (or lack of sensation) is a key ea- with Thc ment in creating an atmosphere that Universi expands levels of concentration and partmeni mental prowess, according to neuro- creating physiologist John Lilly, the father of allowStig the flotation tank. languag Lilly found that about 90 percent environr of our neural activity is dedicated to tanks. interpreting gravity and computing how to move about without falling. Such The flotation tank was designed spe- possible cifically with this in mind: to free up have vid( this 90 percent of neural functioning side thenr for more intensive and creative men- viewing. tal pursuits. ody ger said that because "... ex- ry input is no longer going brain, you can think (more and intensely), work out s... become very creative." wner Twigg, a University added as an additional bene- the more you float, the less to sleep." ugh the center has been open two-and-a-half weeks, it has stablished a clientele of 214, 0 of which are University said Granger. aid she has already conversed Xmas Kavanagh, chair of the ty's Romance language de-- t, who expressed interest in a program which would udents to learn their foreign es under the "superlearning" rent created by the flotation a program could be made because the flotation tanks eo monitors and speakers in- n which allow for videotape Engin. search team meets BY MARION DAVIS A committee of seven faculty members, one alumnus, and a grad- uate student will meet tonight to begin the search for a new engineer- ing dean, committee chair Albert Schultz said yesterday. Schultz, a mechanical engineering professor, said the meeting will be an organizational one in which the group will discuss search procedures and set meeting dates. Schultz said he is keeping an open mind about the search and is not necessarily looking to fill the position with a current engineering faculty member, he said. "(We) just want to pick the best people," he said. "The college has had some very nice leadership over the years and has had some changes for the better." Schultz said he hopes that who- ever gets the job will continue the college's positive progress. Charles Vest vacated the position when he was promoted to provost and vice president of academic affairs last fall. Engineering Prof. Daniel Atkins is serving as interim dean. until a permanent replacement is found. qvm - . C s i Ah Ah Ah i t A& r' Ah A m U E U U U U U U U U U U Id j 'T - w r9 q K~xxwxzzx~xrl "ea\ . a *.I aa COUPON With this entire ad- FREE BRIN 12 oz. drink expires A GRE 1-26-89 (ONE T -4o The COUPO Accidental Tourist G IN THIS Al EAT MOVIE ICKET PER C Women professors receive honors BY JESSICA ST RICK Two women professors who have been active both in campus and state political life were honored yesterday for their contributions by the Aca- demic Women's Caucus, during the group's fifth annual awards cere- mony. Social work Prof. Beth Reed and UM-Dearborn political science Prof. -Helen Graves were given the second annual Sarah Goddard Power Award, named for the University regent who 0 died in 1987. "(The) award is given to a person who makes a contribution to the betterment of women," said Margaret Lourie, the associate director of the Women's Studies Department. Reed, who chairs the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs, was a prominent choice be- cause of her commitment to work * "very hard to have a creative, posi- tive atmosphere on campus" and her dedication of "many, many hours of her time to help students," said Di- ane Kaplan Vinokur, assistant dean for research and development in the School of Social Work. Caucus Co-Chair Judith Heady agreed: "Beth has been active in try- ing to promote the academic status of women." Upon receiving the award, Reed recounted a sense of fulfillment at her own personal achievement as well as the progress that the caucus has sustained. "It's something about these two things coming together that makes this so powerful," she said. Graves has provided "energetic leadership" for the University's po- litical internship programs both in the United States and Canada, according to a program issued by the caucus, as well as service as a dele- gate to state and national Democratic conventions. Eli Lilly and Company (A Research Based Pharmaceutical Manufacturer) Invites University of Michigan Students Interested in Careers as System Analysts and Summer Internships to a Reception and Presentation Today, Thursday, January 19, 1988 Room 1311, EECS Building 5:15 - 7:15 P.M. A strong computer background is desired with CS, Engineering, Natural Sciences or Business degrees. Resumes are requested. Refreshments will be provided. mr- D FOR. DEAL! OUPON) air of the White Worm n I -~ I ~ .""" N N N NN N N Salaan Bombay L DOOO04 NDxxu'-"p, - --- - - -M- - - --- - The University Dance Company The University Symphony Orchestra The Jazz Ensemble The Womens's Glee Club VIVA STRAVINSKY!. Srri