Classes aim to *increase success by Christine Kloostra Daily Staff Writer The first in a series of free classes aimed at increasing the prosperity of students and low-income Ann Arbor residents was offered last night at the Ann Arbor YMCA. Sponsored by the Network for Equal Economic Development (N.E.E.D.) Service Inc. and the Washtenaw County government, the "Prosperity Partners Classes" will provide information on how to ob- tain money for college, find better jobs, and finance a business. Each class in the week-long * series, which runs through Saturday, will focus on a different method of achieving prosperity, including set- ting goals, communication skills, networking, and writing resumes. Thursday night's session will fea- ture representatives from the University of Michigan, Eastern Michigan University, and Washtenaw Community College. S. Talonda Cabell-Kahlid, executive di- Vrector of the N.E.E.D. Service, said the session will provide "information not necessarily known in financial aid offices about schol- arships and grants. N.E.E.D. sponsored a pilot "Prosperity Partners" session in, July. Thirty-three of the 37 partici- pants in the program were able to re- ceive full scholarships, free com- puter classes, guaranteed jobs, or grants to start their own businesses, Cabell-Kahlid said. N.E.E.D. is a Washtenaw County non-profit, student- and community-staffed organization. "We help with any emergency need that people have been denied," said Cabell-Kahlid. The classes will be held at the Ann Arbor Y' at 5:30 p.m. today ,through Friday and Saturday at 11:00 a.m. Participants in the program who, provide the necessary information by today will have their resumes typed at no cost. The Mi~higan Daily - Wednesday, November 8, 1989 - Page 5 Congress saves US from default WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate and House agreed last night to raise the treasury's borrowing au- thority above $3.1 trillion, prevent- ing the government from reneging for the first time ever on its pledge to repay creditors. The legislation was approved by voice vote in the Senate and by a 269-99 margin in the House and sent to President Bush. His signature would prevent the government from running out of cash on Thursday. "Default is unthinkable," said Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas. "It would strike a devastating blow to our country's credit rating." The way for action on the debt- ceiling increase was cleared earlier in the evening when an arrangement was worked out to remove from the debt-ceiling debate a fight over modi- fying catastrophic health insurance for retirees. The agreement was blocked for more than an hour by Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa. He sought to add to the debt-ceiling bill an amenditiii that would bar use of the cash-laden Social Security trust fund income to make the budget deficit look smaller than it is. Heinz dropped his objection after Majority Leader George Mitchell, D- Maine, assured him that the Social Security amendment would be given priority consideration next year. Under the agreement: -The debt-ceiling bill has-only one amendment. that would repeal a 1986 law, bitterly opposed by busi- ness, that prohibits employer-fi- nanced health insurance plans 'from discriminating against lower-paid workers. House acceptance of that. amendment would send the paccag . to Bush. -The House would pass a ite* bill repealing catastrophic medical' coverage for retirees. That wbiuld send the bill to the Senate, whitbh would be expected to amend it with a plan repealing the unpopular suttax. He'll pump you up LSA senior Mark Hynes works out yesterday at the CCRB. No word on how much he can bench press. Improvisational Theater Troupe promotes awareness Los Angeles hospitals train Army surgeons by Joanna Broder Daily Staff Writer The scene: a meeting of the Israel Student Union. The cast: Amy, the strong willed and inflexible president who led the group; Michelle, who listened qui- etly to everyone else's opinions, fearful of contributing her own ideas; Randi, who sauntered in late and dis- rupted her peers with mindless chat- ter; and Oran, who appeared frus- trated by the meeting's lack of seri- ousness. Members of "Talk to Us," an in- teractive theater troupe sponsored by B'nai Brith Hillel and the Univer- sity's Housing Division, portrayed these characters in a presentation ti- tled "Group Process" at Hillel yes- terday. "Talk to Us" was founded by Theater Prof. Scott Weissman, the current director of Residential Reper- tory Theater, in the fall of 1987. "('Talk to Us') grew out of Resi- dential Repertory Theater in an at- tempt to create live theater experi- ences on campus which directly mir- ror and recreate campus life on stage," said Weissman. He added that "Talk to Us" deals with crucial so- cial issues like racism, sexism, ho- mophobia, anti-Semitism, and inter- personal issues such as peer pres- sure. "The goal is to try to get people to explore things they might not normally feel comfortable exploring and to give people a safe environ- ment to explore themselves," said Lisa Dixon, director of one of the two "Talk to Us" troupes. The troupes' shows usually con- sist of three short scenes relating to social issues, three question and an- swer periods in which the audience may ask the characters questions, and one longer monologue which ties together the major themes of the show. While actors base their per- formances on character sketches, most of their acting is improvised. "Talk to Us" performs at most of the residence halls, Student Health Services, Hillel, and other organiza- tions on campus which wish to promote student awareness. In addi- tion, the troupe has travelled to Stockton State University in New Jersey, Washington University in St. Louis, and other colleges in Boston and Chicago. "More than solve the issues, we want to make people aware of the is- sues," said Kathy Clark, a Ph.D. candidate in kinesiology, the study of human muscular movements. LSA senior Jeff Olds, a second- year member of the troupe, agreed. "We don't claim to have the an- swers," he said. "We just get people to talk about social issues on cam- pus." LOS ANGELES (AP) - U.S. Army surgeons are learning trauma treatment skills at a Watts-based hospital that has one of the busiest emergency rooms in the country tending to the carnage of gang gunshot victims. The County Board of Supervisors yesterday approved a motion to ex- pand the presence of military physi- cians at beleaguered Martin Luther King-Drew Medical Center into other areas, including obstetrics and pediatrics. The county-run hospital has been under fire and its director was re- cently removed following reports that it was understaffed and under- fujnded. Yesterday's motion by Supervi- sor Kenneth Hahn, whose district in- cludes the hospital, calls for the Health Services Department to de- velop a proposal within two weeks for expanding the military physician training program. Army doctors usually receive their trauma surgery training at pub- lic hospitals near their home bases. But military officials say that the young surgeons rarely see the kinds of gaping, multiple wounds caused by automatic and semiautomatic gunfire, like those common to gang shootings here, where more than 353 gang-related slayings were reported last year. A pair of U. S. Army resiilent physicians from Texas recently completed a two-month training program at King-Drew, where offi cials say gang mayhem creates ar vir- tual steady stream of gunshot, vic- tims. "Here, you'll see a case where a. .22 (-caliber gun) accidentally;di"- charged," said Dr. John McPh'ail; chief of surgery at William Beau- mont Medical Center in El Ps,. Texas, yesterday. "But at King,,cbe, typical shooting was a victim;slIot multiple times by someone trying to, kill them with a large caliber and- more bullet holes in the patientsT ., THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL764-0557 4 -. ... .. .....-..... Nations urge world to stabilize emissions 't NOORDWIJK, Netherlands (AP) - More than 60 nations yesterday urged the world to sta- bilize by the year 2000 the emission of bases blamed for the "greenhouse effect." They acted over opposition from the United States, the So- viet Union and Japan. Most of the participants at the 68-nation con- ference on global warming adopted a declaration saying that carbon dioxide emissions should be stabilized within 10 years as a first step toward fighting the pollution problem. Environmentalists were bitter about the re- fusal of the United States, Soviet Union and Japan to sign the declaration. "The conference is a total failure, and the United States and Japan have sabotaged it," said Daniel Becker, an official of the Sierra Club, a Washington-based environmentalist group. The Dutch, hosts of the two-day ministerial meeting, had hoped to align all the participating nations unanimously behind a commitment to stabilize emissions by the end of the century and to begin reducing them in 2005. William Reilly, chief administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, said the "distinction between those countries that want to commit themselves to stabilization by the year 2000 and those, including the United States, who are not prepared to say so at this time." On Monday, Reilly said, "We believe in a re- duction of carbon dioxide. But we're not prepared to say by what time and by what level." Reilly said the countries should wait for com- pletion of studies by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a forum trying to find ways of reducing global warming. The level at which the emissions were to be stabilized will be set next year by the U.N.-spon- sored climate change panel, which is planning a meeting in Washington in February, and the World Climate Conference scheduled for late 1990, according to the declaration. Earlier, Japanese delegates said they were awaiting more scientific data on climate change and on the economic effects of drastic measures to curb the greenhouse effect, which is believed by some scientists to be the cause of a slight warming of the earth's atmosphere. Some scientists fear the phenomenon could eventually lead to the flooding of coastal areas and expansion of deserts. Carbon dioxide is a major contributor to the greenhouse effect. In 1988, the United States ac- counted for nearly 24 percent of total world emis- sions of the gas, according to the Dutch Envi- ronment Ministry. Much carbon dioxide is pro- duced by the burning of fuels such as coal and gasoline. The final declaration also called for ways to provide money to Third World nations to help them cope with the consequences of climatic change. I MICHIGAN . I-.r, !I-- 1i . w -r GE 4 '" f 1lY .. GIQAPINE t The Personal Column }- MICH;GAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS --- - --- TIE OF FEEI LIKE Ai 5r4WI ? 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