The Michigan Daily -Friday , September 28, 1990 - Page 3 I New student magazine will disci by Bonnie Bouman LSA sophomore Heather Szerlag looked at the student-run publica- tions available on campus last year and decided something was missing. What was missing was a global perspective. Szerlag's brain-child is the International Observer, a monthly 20-page magazine will hit news stands by mid November. The magazine will be distributed free of charge. The IO staff hopes to offer readers an informative, unbiased analysis of world events and culture. "It's not liberal, it's not conser- vative - it's global," Szerlag said. "We wanted something a little more, in-depth, more thought-out than iss global what's available on campus." IO's first edition will feature arti- cles on German reunification, the Soviet Union, and a cultural study of Iraq by two students who lived there last summer. Dave Bernstein, an LSA junior, will start a column on what he dubs "attitude satire". Other possibilities for the publi- cation include contributions from foreign universities, editorials, and articles on world culture. The staff expects funding from the Michigan Student Assembly. They will also depend on advertising revenue to finance the magazine. The 10 staff expects its writers will vary from foreign students and people who have spent time abroad, to anyone interested enough in a views subject to research it. Szerlag found it difficult to pin- point the exact aim of the Interna- tional Observer, only that it will fill a gap in an international view- point on campus. Szerlag said that even with the University's reputa- tion as an international university, students can become isolated in the academic community and lose sight of the rest of the world. "This is a world magazine. Id like to cover everything, not ju~st Europe," she said. "We don't want the World News Tonight perspective," agreed Envi- ronmental Editor Chris Bzdok, an LSA sophomore. "Mouthing the media is just one level, and we want more than that." Iranian kills student during ,"$ hostage stand-off at Berkeley BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - A gun-carrying "deranged" Iranian man with a hatred of blond Americans died in a burst of police bullets yes- terday, seven hours after he stormed a bar, killed one man, wounded seven people and took 33 hostages. Six officers stormed Henry's Publick House and Grille in the Du- rant Hotel after police negotiators decided they couldn't talk the man out of the bar, said Lt. Jim Polk. The man with the gun, identified by University of California, Berke- ley, spokesperson Ray Colvig as Mehrdad Dashti, gave away his posi- tion inside the bar by using one of the terrorized hostages as an interme- diary in talking to police by tele- phone. "Every time the hostage would have to ask a question of this bad guy, he would have to turn around and look at him and this gave us a good idea of where he was," said Polk. Seconds after the burst of police gunfire around 7:20 a.m., hostages, some of whom had been forced to sit in the windows of the bar as shields, ran from the hotel. Dashti, 30, a native of Iran, was naked and bleeding when he was loaded into an ambulance and taken to Highland Hospital. He was dead on arrival, according to hospital spokesperson Phyllis Brown. "He was apparently very con- fused," said Berkeley Police Captain Phil Doran. "Deranged is not a bad description." "For some reason, he had some- thing against blondes, Caucasian women and blond-haired, blue-eyed men," said Douglas Moore, 25, a UC student and manager of the bar who was one of the hostages. "He had something against Americans." "He said (American women were the) kind of trash that was leading guys like him on and that they de- served to be punished.... He did ,i pretty good job of degrading women." Moore said Dashti claimed tce "government owed him $16 trillion for mental telepathy work and this was his way of getting back." KENNETH SMOLLER/Daity Diag dancing Ann Arbor resident Jay Miller along with other members of the Inter-Cooperative Council are "dancing in the Diag", hoping that others will join them. UAC Mini-Courses ofer students break from everyday stress by Beth Halverson throughout his tenure with UAC. If you're feeling like a 4.0 stu- Mini-Courses were, said Jackson, dent in Stress 101, a couple hours a "instituted to primarily provide stu- week doing the rumba, sipping fine dents with a service, and secondly, to wines, or playing eight-ball might act as a UAC fundraiser." be just what you need to make it Lisa Kruman, UAC Mini- through the semester, Courses Chair, agreed with Jackson The University Activities Center and said UAC does profit even after (UAC), the University's largest stu- teachers' salaries, advertising, and dent-run organization, is offering no- basic costs are subtracted. credit Mini-Courses nightly this "Most UAC committees usually term at the Michigan Union to inter- lose money," said Jackson, "but ested students, faculty, and Ann Ar- Mini-Courses have proven them- bor residents. selves to be a big money maker." UAC classes, priced from $20- UAC exercise courses compare $40, are available in self-defense, favorably to those offered at the yoga, aerobics, bartending, sign lan- CCRB said one student. guage, massage therapy, pool, wine Kristen Hallin, LSA junior, who tasting, CPR, and ballroom dancing. has taken aerobics at both places be- Participants must be 21 years old to lieves the UAC classes are "much enroll in wine tasting. better" because UAC uses more con- The combination of a relaxed at- sistent teaching methods she said. mosphere along with the chance to "UAC classes are just as good as learn a new skill have made Mini- the CCRB," agreed Jackson who Courses increasingly popular extra- emphasized the fact that the UAC curricular activities, said UAC Presi- price is about $20 cheaper. dent Sarah Jackson. Ballroom danc- Registration for Mini-Courses ing, wine tasting, and bartending - continues at the Michigan Union taught with ,colored water instead of Ticket Office through Oct. 8. Course alcohol - are the three most popu- lists are available at the UAC office lar classes this fall. on the north side of the second floor Students and specialized instruc- of the Michigan Union and at the tors teach the various courses. Dave Campus Information Center. Scheer, the owner of Village Corner, One final word to the wise: Mini- has taught wine tasting for the past Courses, said Kruman, are often at twelve years for the UAC. Scheer maximum enrollment just like other said his self-taught knowledge of University classes and over-rides will wine has consistently kept his be granted on a first come, first serve classes at maximum enrollment basis. "Government increases bank insurance fees '90-'91 Engineering Grads Discover your future with Bailey Controls After striving to reach your goal of a quality education, you're looking for the opportunity to become part of an organization that will recognize your potential, challenge your abilities, and reward your contributions. 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J I ill AL, N "ARMY -Taupe " Brown '"Black Khaki " Black Sir i WWAT'S WFIT 90" 138 iaot FOR JUNIOR NURSING STUDENTS WASHINGTON (AP) - Regula- tors learned yesterday the govern- ment fund protecting bank accounts is dwindling faster than thought only two months ago, and they voted a 1991 increase of more than 60 per- cent on the deposit insurance premi- ums charged banks. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s bank fund dropped from $13.2 billion at the end of last year to $11.4 billion at the end of June- a 14 percent decline. FDIC Chair L. William Seidman said he now expects that by the end 'of the year the fund will have lost "closer to $3 billion" rather than the tion would have to consider a tax- payer bailout, as they have with the S&L insurance fund. After receiving the new financial report, the five-member FDIC board raised the insurance premium charged banks by more than 60 percent. Banks in 1991 will pay 19.5 cents for every $100 in deposits, up from 12 cents this year and 8.3 cents last year. The higher rate will raise the fund's premium income from $2.8 billion in 1990 to $4.8 billion in 1991. Under last year's S&L bailout law, the premium had been scheduled to rise to 15 cents. Regulators began A SUMMER STUDENT NURSING EXPERIENCE AT MAYO FOUNDATION HOSPITALS Here is your opportunity to work at Mayo Medical Center for the summer. Summer III is a paid, supervised hospital work experience at Saint Marys Hospital and Rochester Methodist Hospital, both part of Mayo Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota. You are eligible for Summer Ill after your junior year of a four year baccalaureate nursing program. It includes experience on medical and surgical nursing units or in operating rooms. Free Aerosole T-Shirt with Every Purchase Friday and Saturday Sept. 28 & 29. "LiOMERUN" " Tobacco $AO * Black Benefits include: I Application Deadline: December 1,1990 I " Hourly salary of $8.45 " Differentials of $.50/hour for evenings, $.60/hour for nights " Subsidized apartment living .1.41