r LSA dean The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 8, 1990 - Page 3 encourages faculty-student meals by Donna Woodwell Daily Faculty Reporter LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg is encouraging more professors to ac- company students to meals in resi- dence hall cafeterias to promote fac- ulty-student relations. Earlier this term, Goldenberg sent a letter asking LSA faculty to tell their students to feel free to invite their professors to meals in the resi- dence halls. The professors' meals are cour- tesy of University Housing Services. Goldenberg has already accepted several student invitations and said her discussions with them have given her new insight into students' daily lives. Goldenberg has also re-, ceived positive feedback from several LSA professors about the program. Director of Food Services Dave Prentowski said inviting faculty to eat in dorms is nothing new. "This is something which has been on the books for years. All procedures have already been worked out." Prentowski said a faculty member accompanied by a student can obtain a guest meal ticket at the front desk of the residence hall. However, clerks at the East Quad, West Quad, and South Quad front desks were not yet aware of the policy. The Housing Department will only pay for professors' meals. Stu- dents who do not have meal plan or entree plus cards must purchase meal tickets - $3.15 for breakfast, $4.70 for lunch, and $6.10 for dinner. Student reaction was generally positive about the idea. RC junior Ellen Klowder said, "It would de- mystify the faculty. After all, they are here to listen to our concerns." However, some students feel un- comfortable inviting professors to meals. "I don't think I would take advantage of it. I don't know enough of my professors," said RC senior Martha Meyer. Meyer also said it is more impo?- tant for faculty to have close contact with upperclass students, most of whom do not live in University housing. Of 22,000 University undergradu= ates, only 8,000 live in the residence halls. West Quad Food Service Produ&e tion Supervisor Susan Hyllested said she looked forward to greater faculty patronage of cafeterias. "We have a lot of hope that more faculty will come," she said. JONATHAN LISS/Daily Tune in Carl Freire, second year graduate student, broadcasts live from student radio station WCBN. The station begins its blIeventh annual fundraiser today. IEating disorders' counselors help improve body images Reggae concert to help San Francisco earthquake victims by Joanna Broder ;aily Health Issues Reporter A major concern of many stu- dents at the University is gaining weight, especially first year students vOho are ridden with the myth of "the *freshmen 15," even though Univer- sity studies show the average percent :of weight students gain during their first year in college is 4.5. Lori Weiselberg, a health educa- tor at Health Services who facilitates "Too Focused on Food" - a support group designed to help support indi- :viduals pre-occupied with food - decided to launch a peer education program on eating disorders when ,9 she received more requests for pre- sentations on the subject than she could handle by herself. The group, Peer Education Pro- gram on Body Image, Dieting and Eating Disorders, consists of eight peer counselors who "have some kind of interest in eating disorders and group facilitation skills," Weiselberg said. Last night marked the second presentation the group has given. The topics considered were body image, dieting and it's hazards, and eating disorders themselves. LSA senior Amy Ahlfeld and Residential College sophomore Rebecca Novick, THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Socially Active Latino Student Association - 7:30 in Angell Hall Rm. 221 Earth Day Organizing Com- mittee - 7 p.m. on Union 4th *floor Tagar Meeting --- 8 p.m. at the Hillel, 62 Trees Amnesty International --- cam- pus group meeting 6 p.m. MLB 2012 Rainforest Action Movement - -- general meeting and speaker 7 p.m. 1040 Dana Bldg. (School of Natural Resources) UM Cycling --- team meeting and rollers riding 6 p.m. in the Sports Coloseum UM Handbell Ringers Club --- new members welcome if they read music; meeting at 4 p.m. 900 Burton Tower Speakers "Friendship or Romance: How Do You Tell? Stages in the Dating Process in the U.S." --- part of the Global Friendship and Dating Series a brown bag discussion at noon in the International Center UM Visiting Writers Series -_- Carolyn See will be reading from her work 5 p.m. Union Pendletorn: Room The Student Forum: "The Arab Israeli Conflict"- Students welcome to participate in this MSTV taped discussion 4:45 p.m. Schorling Auditorium, School of Ed. "Growth and Mortality-- Risk Tradeoffs: Implications for Ontogenetic Shifts in Ecology" --- Earl Werner speaks at 4 p.m. in the E. Lecture Room, 3rd Floor of Rackham "Prehistoric Maize: What to do and What Not to do With It" --- Sandy Dunavan speaks noon-1 p.m. in Room 2009 Natural Science Museum "Multitalented Chicanos: Will W, Integrate with the "History, Politics, and Discourse in Luisa Valenzuela's The L izar d's Tale and Isabel Allende's .TiU House of the Spirits" --- Sharon Magnarelli speaks at 5 p.m. in the 4th Floor Commons of the MLB "Mathematics of Modems" --- Robert Calderbank speaks 4-5:30 p.m. in EECS 1200 Jewish Spiritual Traditions-- Humanistic Traditions --- Sherwin Wine will speak at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel Furthermore Black History Month Arts at Mid-day --- Stephen Michael Newby discusses and illustrates his electronic music noon in the Union Pendleton Room Women's Club Lacrosse - practice 4-6 p.m. in the Coliseum (5th and Hill) Northwalk --- the north campus night time walking service runs from 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in Bursley 2333 or call 763-WALK Safewalk --- the night time safety walking service runs from 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in UGLi 102 or call 936-1000 ECB Peer Writing Tutors --- peer writing tutors available for help on papers 7-11 p.m. in the Angell/Haven and 611 Church St. computing centers Northcoast --- UM jazz ensemble will perform at the North Campus Dining Hall Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band -- a benefit performance for the Red Cross Earthquake Relief Fund at 9 p.m. Union Ballroom Israel Information Days --- information about spending a summer in Israel 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; call 769-0500 for an appointment Hillel Social Committee --- happy hour 5-8 p.m. at Dominick's Impact Dance Theatre --- will perform at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Vital Elements: Dances for 1990 --- University Dance Comnanv nerforms at 8 n m in conducted the workshop, encourag- ing group participation. Ahlfeld and Novick emphasized the pressures the media places on women to maintain a "thin" figure and the risks involved in many types of diets, such as increased risk for binges, higher likelihood of develop- ing obsessions over food. Also the counselors pointed to the fact that when a person cuts calories, her metabolism slows so when she starts eating regularly again it takes the body longer to metabolize food and weight gain is highly probable. Studies conducted by Associate Professor of Community Health Programs in the School of Public Health and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry in the Medical School Adam Drewnowski, in 1987 show the average weight gain of first-year University women is only four and a half pounds. The studies also re- vealed 85 percent of both first year men and women at the University are unhappy with their weight. All the women with poor body images wanted to lose weight, but approxi- mately half the men believed they could best achieve their ideal look by gaining weight. The study shows of the 82 per- cent of the first-year females on di- ets, 3 percent have Bulimia( an eat- ing disorder in which a person en- gages in episodes of binging and purging) and 9 percent are considered at risk for an eating disorder. It's(the group) wonderful. There's such a need for it on campus," Said Judith Banker, Director for the Cen- ter for Eating Disorders "Issues around body image are created by social pressures and it's primarily these social pressures that lead to eating disorders. By getting people to talk to each other we can begin to clear up misconceptions and myths about weight," Novick said. Dr. Richard Pyle, Associate Pro- fessor of Psychiatry at the Univer- sity of Minnesota Medical School, reinforced this idea. "I think every- one agrees that there has to be less socio-cultural emphases on thin- ness," he said. Pyle pointed to the fact that the median weight of Miss America drops every year, adding that one year the winner's weight was only 70 percent of her ideal body weight classifying her as anorexic. Catherine Iagnemma, a freshman in the Residential College said, "It's hard to deal with insecurities about your weight and still feel good about yourself." According to Pyle, studies seem to give statistical support to these sentiments. Findings indicate 27 percent of college students have had one or more symptom of Bulimia or Anorexia at some point during their lives. SAY IT IN THE ... DAILY CLASSIFIED S /1 By Daniel Poux Daily MSA Reporter The island sounds of the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band will rock the Michigan Union Ballroom tonight, and the music's effects will be felt as far away as San Francisco, courtesy of the Michigan Student Assembly. All proceeds from MSA's benefit. concert will go to the San Francisco Red Cross, to help victims of last October's earthquake. Even though the earthquake shook San Francisco several months ago, there are still victims in need of aid, said LSA Junior Susan Langnas, Campus Governance Chair and coor- dinator of the benefit concert. "There is definitely a need for as- sistance," said Langnas. "People are still suffering from the effects of the quake, most importantly the poor people. That's who we want the money to go to." Langnas said the benefit was originally suggested by Laura Sankey, former MSA member. Scheduling conflicts with the band and the union have prevented MSA from holding the benefit until now. "The poor people of San Fran- cisco can't get back on their feet that quickly," Langnas said, "all their be- i r I br!!'- tou eGr y7 Computer3'eid longings have been destroyed." Andrew Rose, assistant to the di- rector of financial development at the 'There is definitely a need for assistance. People are still suffering from the effects of the quake, most importantly the poor people.' - Susan Langnas MSA Representative Golden Gate Red Cross in San Francisco, confirmed Langnas' statements. "Since October, we have set up a Homeless Fund for people who were made homeless by the quake and for people that were homeless before the quake," he said. "Many of San Francisco's home- less live in the tenements and hotels of the 'Tenderloin' district, one of the areas that 'was hardest hit by the October quake," Rose said. "This Homeless Fund will go to help relo- cate these people, among others." Tickets will be on sale at the door for $5.00, with all proceeds go- ing to the people of San Francisco. The benefit begins at 9:00, and features a free non-alcoholic beverage bar, courtesy of the University's food services. The band will proba- bly rock on until 1:00 a.m. I I O X F O R D MODERN BRITISH STUDIES Literature - History - Politics 4 Modern British Studies offers upper-level undergradu- ates a program in Britain's modern literature and culture, social and political history, and governmental processes. The fourteen-week program includes sixteen Boston University semester-hour credits, lectures and tutorials taught by faculty from Oxford University, centrally located housing, and student privileges at St. Cather- ine's College, Oxford University. For program details and an application. complete the coupon below and"return it to: Boston University Washington Internship Program 725 Commonwealth Avenue B2 SR ston, MA 02215 617/353-9888 y n _ ' k G2 }DC BOSTON UNIVERSITY An equal opportunity, affirmative action institution Please send me information about the Modern British Studies Program. Name - Address City College/University - Fall Spring State Zip 19 ___ t x 3 !' Antiques Appliances Books Clothes for Entire Family Draperies & Curtains Sponsored by the FEBRUARY 8,9,10 Kiwanis Club of Ann Arbor with the cooperation of Thursday 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Friday 10 a.m.-7 p.m. M W Io,6 Saturday 9 a.m.-1 p.m. KIWANIS ACTIVITIES CENTER i