The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, September 25, 1991 - Page 3 Juniors, seniors make home in residence halls by Uju Oraka Every year many students rush to experience life off campus, but there are some who prefer to remain liv- ing in the dorms. Shenita Talton, an LSA senior living in Helen Newberry said, "I don't like to pay rent, and with heavy class loads it would be a pain to have to cook everyday." Talton added that she likes the location of the dorm because all of her classes are within a five-minute radius. Jajuan Williams, another senior who lives in a residence hall, said she did not have the time to look for her own apartment. "The dorm is very convenient and hassle-free," she said. Since the University is located on a large campus with an abundance of off campus housing, many stu- dents have the choice to live in dorms or in apartments. Unlike small, private colleges, the Univer- sity is not required to house all stu- dents. "Housing officials are required to accommodate all first-year stu- dents," said Housing Department spokesperson Ed Solowitc. Approx- imately 17,000 students live in University housing, most of whom are first-year students. Housing reports from the last 10 years show a declining percentage of students living in University hous- ing as students reach upperclass sta- 'I don't like to pay rent, and with heavy class loads it would be a pain to have to cook everyday' - Shenita Talton, LSA senior tus: 98 percent of first-year stu- dents and 40 percent of sophomores elect to live in University housing. However, for juniors and seniors, those numbers shrink to 15 percent and 6.5 percent, respectively. As the numbers reflect, after one or two years of dorm living, most students prefer to live off campus. LSA senior Sylvia Curtis experi- enced living both on and off campus and prefers living in an apartment. "It gives me a chance to get away from the campus environment," she said. "College life seems stressful with the competition and the non- private moments. Living off campus gives me the opportunity to be a part of a college world and the real world." Other students have moved out of the residence halls to save money. "It's a trade-off - living in an apartment you pay less money for less noise, better food, greater inde- pendence and more privacy," said LSA sophomore David Pittman. Solowitc also said many stu- dents leave the dorms for a better social life, such as moving into fra- ternities or sororities. "Living in the dorm is better be- cause you meet more people... I have a lot of friends on my floor that I hang out with," first-year LSA stu- dent Alyssa Murray said. "If I were to live off-campus, I would pick one of my friends from my hall to live with me." You're soaking in it MICHELLE GUY/Daily Ewe Madsen, supervisor of introductory biology classes, has the occupational fringe benefit of cleaning out the departmental fish tanks. Yesterday, Madsen undertook some "fall cleaning," sweeping the excess food out of the 55 gallon tropical marine tank in 1566 C.C. Little. Yeltsin arranges cease-fire *.'between warring republics a i 0 MOSCOW (AP) - Boris Yeltsin scored a diplomatic coup yesterday by arranging a cease-fire between warring factions in Arnenia and Azerbaijan. But strife raged in Central Asia and Georgia's leader ordered a state of emergency in the Georgian capital. SYeltsin and Kazakhstan resident Nursultan Nazarbayev negotiated a temporary end to the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, which has claimed 800 lives and driven tens of thousands from their homes since 1988. .The settling of the dispute was a diplomatic breakthrough that had eluded President Mikhail Gorbachev for years. "We don't exclude the ossibility that he will get involved in other places," Yeltsin spokesperson Pavel Voshchanov told The Associated Press, referring to conflicts simmering elsewhere in the Soviet Union. Georgian President Zviad Gamsakhurdia said he would call a state of emergency in Tbilisi today and vowed to oust hundreds of ghumed opponents who have occupied the republic's broadcasting studios since Sunday. Rebel Georgian National Guards captured four armed supporters of Gamsakhurdia and held them in the center. Tengiz Kitovani, commander of the maverick guards, claimed Gamsakhurdia's backers were trying to provoke the opposition, which is insisting that he step down. Yesterday, Gamsakhurdia singled out former Soviet Foreign Minster Eduard Shevardnadze as directing the opposition. Gorbachev's new spokesperson, Andrei Grachev, praised the "sons of perestroika." The spokesperson denied the two republic leaders had upstaged the president, saying reforms that Gorbachev began in 1985 had enabled them to secure the truce. "The fact that the two most important leaders of the Soviet republics are looking for a compromise solution to offer to some others ... does not mean the president is not functioning," Grachev told reporters. Yeltsin and Nazarbayev had persuaded leaders from Armenia, Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh to meet Monday in a neutral Russian town to discuss the conflicting claims to the enclave. The sides announced yesterday that they agreed to put down their guns immediately and restore limited self-rule by Jan. 1 under Russian and Kazakh supervision, the news agency Tass said. A joint communique signed Monday said Soviet army and Interior Ministry troops would remain in the region as peacekeepers. The new reformist Soviet defense minister, Yevgeny Shaposhnikov, took part in the talks. The sides agreed to "ensure the eventual return of all deported people to their homes" and guarantee their safety; to release all hostages within two weeks and to reopen all railways and highways. The communique was signed by Yeltsin, Nazarbayev, Azerbaijani President Ayaz Mutalibov and Armenian President Levon Ter- Petrosian, with "participation" by Nagorno-Karabakh officials. Whether the agreement would end bloodshed in the conflict was impossible to determine. Student engineers hold reception by Karen Pier Instead of attending their first interviews with sweaty palms, en- gineering students met recruiters with appetizers and punch in hand at a reception last night. The reception, organized by the Society of Women Engineers, was designed to break the ice between students and corporate recruiters before tomorrow's Career Fair, which is held by Delta Beta Phi and the Society of Women Engineers. About 100 students and 100 re- cruiters mingled during the event. It was nervewracking for members of both groups. Although engineering graduate student Michael Schachler had at- tended similar reception in his na- tive Germany, he said he came to last night's reception to work on "losing excitement and nervous- ness." For one student, the reception was a bit overwhelming. The fanci- ness "makes me feel underdressed," said Engineering senior Dave Power. Power said he was 'going to the re- ception to "meet some people, make some contacts, so they'll recognize my face." Similarly, University alumnus Alex Martin, a recruiter for Proc- tor and Gamble, said that although he had a hard time putting himself in the students' place, he understood their nervousness. "My fiancee said to be aware of their nervousness and that they would be hanging on my every word. I'm somewhat nervous my- self. It's important to represent this company," Martin said. Others were more relaxed. Bob Louis, a recruiter from John Deere, said he thought the reception was "very nice ... It's a good idea. Nice icebreaker." The reception, with appetizers such as tea sandwiches, meatballs, fish, shrimp, fruit, chips and fancy dips, was held in elegant, chandelier- lit rooms at the Campus Inn. Cor- porations represented at the affair sponsored the event, said Jennifer Nussbaum, a member of the Society of Women Engineers. The reception has been held for several years, said Engineering sophomore and Career Fair chair Jamie Hare. The Career Fair will be held to- day at North Campus Commons and Chrysler Building from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 9 i Senate considers extending unemployment benefits Corrections Colleen Dolan-Greene's name was spelled incorrectly in yesterday's paper. GEO negotiators are seeking a 4 percent raise in the first year and a 1 percent raise in the second year. There was no discussion of future raises at *Monday' s meeting. In a story which ran Sept. 16 abortion rights bill SB141 was reported incorrectly. The bill was passed by the Senate and is now being considered by the House. A story in yesterday's paper unclearly reported that UB-MTS will no longer exist second semester. It will continue to exist into second semester, but student accounts will be moved to UM-MTS. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate moved yesterday toward ap- proving a Democratic bill extending jobless benefits for 20 weeks as Republicans, eager to show they too are concerned over the recession, proposed adding up to 10 weeks of benefits. GOP lawmakers pressed for the less-generous alternative, endorsed by President Bush, while offering a separate plan to cut the capital gains tax rate and take other steps to prod the sleepy economy. "President Bush will veto this proposal," Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas said about the Democratic bill. "And the veto is going to be sustained." "And then we ask ourselves, well, what have we done for the un- employed? Zero." "How many more Americans must lose their benefits before this administration acts?" asked Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass). Bush has argued that the Democratic measure is unneeded be- cause, he says, the recession is end- ing. He has also complained that the $5.8 billion legislation would push the federal budget even further into the red because the government would have to borrow to finance it. "Let's bring on the leeches; let's pile on the blankets; let's spread the misery," was how Sen. Phil Gramm, (R-Texas), characterized the Democratic measure. The Democratic bill would pro- vide 20, 13, seven or four weeks of additional benefits, depending on a state's unemployment rate. It would cover people who have ex- hausted the basic 26 weeks of bene- fits since April 1. The new program would expire July 4. The House approved a $6.4 bil- lion version of the bill on Sept. 17 by a 283-125 margin, which House Democratic leaders boasted made the measure veto-proof. To iron out differences between the two bills, the House planned to debate the leg- islation again as early as tomorrow. The smaller, $2.5 billion GOP alternative, sponsored by Dole, was similar to a Republican plan the Senate rejected Aug. 2. It would provide at least six weeks of additional benefits and as many as 10 weeks. But rather than driving up the federal deficit, the measure was designed to pay for it- self from money raised by auction- ing off new radio frequencies and by increasing efforts to recoup bad government loans. "Obviously, it's not as generous as the proposal on the other side, but we pay for it," Dole said. "I think that's fairly generous to future tax- payers and future generations." The other Republican plan, spon- sored by Gramm and several other conservatives, would cut the capital gains tax rate, a favorite Bush pro- posal. That tax is paid on sales of real estate and other property, and supporters of cutting the rate say its reduction would encourage such sales and actually raise more money for the government. The Gramm plan also would ex- tend the research tax credit for businesses, create new individual re- tirement accounts, give tax breaks of up to $1,000 for many first-time homebuyers and create other bene- fits for individuals and companies. :: "A L BER T'S COPYING A Division of N National Reproductions Corporation -Copying &Bindery Services High speed Copiers Fast turn around time Low copy price Recycled Paper -Coursepack Consultation *Copyright Clearance Academic and Personal PHONE 995-0444 FAX 995-1059 -Blueprint Services *Engineering L.D.C. (Large Document Copier) *10 % Student Discount on Blueprint services *Self Serve Copying 8 1/2 x 11 only 4C Albert's - Libertz CI w . N o cn Meetings U-M Baha'i Club, weekly mtg. Stockwell, Rosa Parks Lounge, 8-9:30. U-M Students of Objectivism, Union, Welker Rm, 8 p.m. U-M Engineering Council. 1500 EECS, 7 p.m. Michigan International Relations Society, mass mtg. League, rm D, 7 p.m. U-M Rifle Team, mass mtg for old and new members. Rifle Range, North University Bldg (NUBS), 6:30. Speakers "New Soviet Politics: A Panel Discussion," Profs. Jane Burbank, John Fine, William Rosenberg, John Patrick Dale. Lane Hall Commons, noon. "Theories of Technology and Work," Linda Blum. 1014 Dow Bldg, 3:30-5 p.m. "Cold War Criticism and the Conflict of Interpretations," Tobin Siebers, Rackham West Conf. Rm, 8 p.m. Jan Karski of Georgetown University, Wallenberg Lecture. Rackham Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. "Minimax Estimation for Spherically Symmetric Jorgenson. Union, Pond Rm, 7-8. "Organic Chemistry at the University of Michigan, Part II," Chem Bldg, rm 1640,4 p.m. "Animal Rights Revisited," Carl Cohen. Med Sci II, S. Lecture Hall, noon. Furthermore "America, Israel and the Occupied Territories," brown bag discussion. Rackham East Conf. Rm, noon. "Testing and Grading," LSA TA Training. Angell Aud C, 4-5. U-M Ninjitsu Club, Wednesday prac- tice. IM Bldg, wrestling rm, 7:30-9. U-M Rowing Team, novice practice. 2:30,3:30,4:30,5:30. U-M Women's Lacrosse Club. Call 996-8591 for info. Phi Kappa Pi Scaffold Sit. Diag, 8 a.m. 9/24 - 4 p.m. 9/25. ECB Peer Writing Tutors. Angell/Mason Computing Center, 7- 11. Ultimate Frisbee Club. Mitchell Field, 7-9. U-M Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, Wednesday workout. CCRB Martial Arts Rm, 8-9. Free Speech and Hearing Screenings. Union, Crowfoot Rm, 9-1, 1:30-4. THE MICHIGAN DAILY 764-0552 [ . - - -- A W HAT'S HAPPENING At Amoco Corporation, your degree can be the key to a rewarding career. Come visit our display at the SWE-TBP career fair and learn about our global energy and chemical enter- prise. You'll like what you hear. And you'll be well prepared when we come on campus to interview Amoco Corporation SWE-TBP Career Fair Date: September 25, 1991 Time: 10:00 A ..4:00PM. 7. h a w . , b RECREATIONAL SPORTS Intramural Sports Program GOLF