IF S z nGARDENgs Retaurant Szechuan, Hunan & Peking Cuisine DINE IN COCKTAILS CARRY OUT DELIVERY SUNDAY BUFFET Open 7 days a week Mon-Thurs: 11:30 am-10:00 pm Sat: 12:00 noon-11:00 pm Fri: 11:30 am-11:00pm Sun:12:00 noon-10:00 pm 3035 Washtenaw, Ann Arbor 971-0970 DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOUR ALBUMS AND CASSETTES! BRING YOUR TURNTABLE AND CASSETTE DECK TO OUR FREE CLINIC FEBRUARY 14,11 to 8 CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION Charter the DEARBORN TROLLEY for special occasions day or night. *FUN* *UNIQUE* *CLASSY* *AFFORDABLE* Available Daily Please Call 274-6300 THE ARK Ann Arbors Acoustic Music Club -FOLK eBLUEGRASS .JAZZ .WOMEN'S MUSIC " CHILDREN'S CONCERTS .ACOUSTIC BLUES .NEW AGE .ETHNIC Entertainment & Refreshments For All Alcohol May be Purchased By Members DOORS OPEN 112 HOUR BEFORE SHOWTIME CALL FOR TICKET AND SCHEDULE INFO 761-1451 637 1/2 S. MAIN " ANN ARBOR iUVER. , IRVCKCAFEl 673 FRANKLIN STREET DETROIT 259-8202 presents 3rd ANNUAL BEACH PARTY with JERRY SPRAGUE Thursday Feb. 16th JERRY SPRAGUE Wednesday March 22nd SOUVENIR Thursday March 23rd *Watch for other acts in Feb. & March yet to be announced. RMEN -~ - EXOTIC CHINESE CUISINE Serving The Finest Peking & Szechuan Style Dishes 10% off Carry Out & Regular Dining thru April 30 WO LOCATIONS Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor 'LUNCH 665-3591 Mon-Fr 1130am-2 pm 49IJ Waniefaw ive. 1in i~uorDINNFER Flint Continued from Page 12 Sekelsky noted that even with these problems, students take a pragmatic approach. "Students don't look at minority issues in a radical way, they look at issues realisti- cally. They attempt to work with the administration instead of against them." Problems are also treated directly. "If you have a problem, you have a direct link through the Student Gov- ernment Council (SGC)," Sekelsky said. Unlike the Michigan Student Assembly at Ann Arbor, the SGC enjoys a "healthy" relationship with the administration, according to Chancellor Jones. The president of the SGC sits in on the Chancellor's cabinet. Jones said he has witnessed some racial slurs, such as graffiti, but "because students don't stay here, there is not as much tension. Like the Diag here, two shanties protest- ing apartheid in South Africa were present on campus two years ago, but because of rain and bad weather, one day they were gone." The student newspaper, The Michigan Times, is published bi- weekly. Robert King, the editor-in- chief, said that even the paper's 10- member staff gets along with the administration and SGC. "In the big triangle, where you would look for conflicts between these three, they all get along fine," King added. Most people agreed that the two major problems, parking and apathy, are direct results of Flint being a commuter campus. "On a commuter campus, it's easy to see why people don't have the time to commit," King said. With school taking up eight hours a day, and work occupying another eight hours, most students don't have the time or energy to commit to extra-curricular activities. According to Utley, "people at Flint are just as motivated (as in Ann Ar- bor) but they are doing different things in different ways than here." Sekelsky, however, has a "very optimistic outlook for campus." She explained that, in the past, once people left the campus it was hard to lure them back for activities and meetings, but in "the last several years there's been a change in re- sponse." Popular activities have been dollar movie nights, stand-up comedy, and a lecture series on ev- erything from Greenpeace to eating disorders. Most of the students come from Flint or nearby towns. Admissions director David James called Flint a "regional 'U' " - his office recruits students only within a 50 mile ra- dius of the city. "There are about one percent out-of-state students," he said. It only follows that the Flint campus should have different admis- sions standards than Ann Arbor. T 3535 P 4905 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor 434-7978 Present this ad "We are perceived as elitist, but not as bad as Ann Arbor," James said. The school is not ambiguous about what its admissions standards are. According to an informational brochure applicants are expected to have a grade point average of at least 2.7. ACT or SAT tests are required, but those scores are used only "for advising and placement," and "not admission, except in borderline cases." The campus "couldn't exist if we had the same admission standards" as Ann Arbor, he added. In addition, Flint has a unique 'Challenge' program for those stu- dents applying with lower GPAs. Potential students attend a pre-col- lege program over the summer. If they make it through the intensive program in "U' survival," they get in. "The only person with no chance (to attend U of M-Flint)," James said, "is someone who totally bombed in high school." The profile of Flint students is also out of the ordinary, in the eyes of an Ann Arbor student. "It's a different student body here than in Ann Arbor," said Provost Wong, who has worked on all three Univer- sity campuses. The average age of an undergraduate at Flint is 27. Chancellor Jones said that the , campus takes on an entirely different appearance at 5 o'clock in Mon-Tjhurs. 5 pm-9: 30 pm Fri,.5 pm - I() Sat. ZS pm-I0 tutipmJ Sun. 2'(X) pi; the afternoon, when "non-traditional" students such as full-time workers and mothers attend classes. Because of the dual group of students, Jones said it is "a challenge for the admin- istration to create a vibrant student life." Adult students are "more prag- matic in their approach to educa- tion," said James. "They seem to ask 'how am I going to use this?'- it's not as much knowledge for knowl- edge's sake." "Our students are very serious," Jones added, "they see education as a way A teac tang didn with Fling Ann and h an e beca ing i Members of Student Coalition, a g student awareness on social issues ib IWREAN CUISIN featuring Wonderful Lunch Buffet Monday-Saturday, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. $6.95 Dinner Buffet Monday and Tuesday, 6-9 p.m. $10.95 Buffet includes 4 main dishes, 3 appetizers, and Kimchi and Kana's special salad and dessert. Open Monday-Saturday, 11:30 a.m.- 9 p.m. 1133 E. Huron, Ann Arbor 662-9303 Authentic Hot Sauce & Kim Chee for sale R E S.T A U R A N T -I < __E_ '202+-'' _.rAf ' I Re~taurau~t -Fine German and American food- Imported and Local Beer. _.Wine and Liquors.- OpenGa ly11:00am 8 30 pm sunda I Iam 8 pm 120 W Washington * Downtown Ann Arbor * 662.0-,3 IM. Tired Ais /40W 6/~ a w )ojio,- AJ .. IJ&7" ' - ~ LL.Lf (anI Ks / cr' I Serving Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner COME IN FOR A LATE NIGHT SNACK OR MEAL Variety of 50 sandwiches and many salads to choose from.-also seafood and Italian specialties. Quality food at affordable prices. 0 of the Same Old Crowd? FRIDAYS-FISH ALL YOU CAN EAT, FLIM FLAM (in Plymouth Road Mall) C Plymouh Road NORTH CAMPUS m U & CHIPS ONLY $3.50 Open 7 days a week Mon.-Sat. 6 a.m -10 p.m. Sun., 7 a.m.-9 p.m. We also offer take-out 2707 Plymouth Rd. (In the Plymouth Road. Mail) 994-3036 CF 00 a> z LL U- Unliverst Towr Furnished Apartments 536 S. Forest Ave Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (313) 761-2680 f m Discover what these businesses have to offer U WEEKEND/FEBRUARY 10,1989 . - I . ,. : ., :,