The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 29, 1991 - Page 3 Snores, cookies, and successful roomiesr Yeltsin proposes markets in a year by Renee Huckle Students who have lived to- gether as roommates for four years are hard to find. But they're out there. Most point to patience, toler- ance, and an open mind as the se- crets to success as long-term roommates and friends. A. Mike Velthoven, a fifth-year engineering senior, Scott Walton, a fifth-year LSA senior, and Steve McLean, a first-year Wayne State medical school student, met each other in seventh grade in Union Lake, Michigan and lived together for four years at the University. "We thought it would be cool to all live together," McLean said. .So how did they get along to live together so long? "We never rubbed each other the wrong way. We put up with each other," Velthoven said. Occasionally, small problems arose. Velthoven said he often an- noyed McLean by eating his grand- mother's cookies. "Mike snored a lot. So, we'd throw pillows at him, but we didn't get too angry," McLean added. Yet, the small confrontations were not enough to separate them. "There was nothing that a little patience or ignoring wouldn't solve," Walton said. After a successful first year to- gether, McLean, Velthoven, and Walton decided not to ruin a good thing. "It worked once, why not do }it again?" McLean said. LSA seniors Helen Melia and Grabielle Cline also decided to stick together for four years. Both LSA seniors, Melia is from Livo- nia, Michigan, and Cline is from Knoxville, Tennessee. "We're complete opposites. I'm tall, she's short; she has short hair, I have long hair; she has a black wardrobe and I wear a lot of white; she's more organized, I'm totally not; she's more quiet and I'm more talkative," Melia said. Despite the differences, Melia and Kline had little trouble room- ing blind. "We never had any prob- lems ... We knew how to work with each other," Melia said. During Melia and Cline's sec- ond year together in Couzens resi- dence hall, a dorm competition convinced them they were destined to live with each other for four years. Melia and Cline competed in the "Newly Roomed Game," in which they had to answer questions to prove their compatibility. "It was just like the Newlywed Game ... We won." Melia said. Over time, Melia and Cline have incorporated some of each other's different mannerisms and beliefs into their own lives. "When we lived together we started rubbing off on each other a lot," Melia said. But after four years together, Melia said next year will be diffi- cult. "It will be really hard because we'll probably live in separate states. We'll definitely always keep in touch. We've been through too much together that nothing could pull us apart," Melia said. John Line, an LSA senior from Saugus, Massachusetts, and Mike MOSCOW (AP) - Russian President Boris Yeltsin proposed a painful one-year leap to a market economy for Russia yesterday and said the hardships consumers will suffer were better than the alterna- tive of eternal poverty. Yeltsin invited the other 11 Soviet republics to join his speedy reform plan, which would free state-controlled prices and privatize most businesses in Russia. But he also said Russia was prepared to act unilaterally. He served notice that Russia would form its own army and print its own currency if other regions' increasingly aggressive indepen- dence drives hurt the largest and richest Soviet republic. Yeltsin's timetable for eco- nomic reform was the fastest and most aggressive proposed by any level of government in the Soviet Union, including Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. Previous Kremlin plans to move to a market economy have fallen short because of half-hearted implementation or the refusal of the entrenched Communist bureaucracy to cooperate. Yeltsin's blunt acknowledge- ment that living standards will get worse before they improve was the most candid political admission of how tough it will be to dismantle seven decades of bureaucratic central planning. "Today, in acute crisis condi- tions, it will be impossible to im- plement reforms painlessly," Yeltsin told the Russian Congress of People's Deputies, the republic's parliament. "It will be worse for everybody for about six months," Yeltsin said. I ~HI Lrre- - UILL ail LSA senior John Line, right, and School of Education senior Mike Jansen have been roommates for the past four years. Jansen, a School of Education se- nior from Muskegon, Michigan, also roomed blind. In the beginning, however, Line said life was not always perfect. "The first two years I was pretty much a pig, Mike was al- ways neat. He'd get on me about that," Line said. Yet after getting to know each other, they found that they shared similar goals in life. "We related to each other like brothers," Line said. Line said common religious be- liefs played a large role in their friendship. "Beirag Christian, you're called to h : with one an- other," he said. Line said ' a- kent the room- mates together ;,U four years is simple. "We got along great. We knew that we had th: ngs in com- mon ... There's got to be something to this, so we figured - what the heck." The Institute On Comparative Political And Economic Systems The Institute On Political Journalism The Bryce Harlow Institute On Business And Government Affairs Georgetown University, June 10 - July 24,1992 If you are an undergraduate student with a strong interest in political science, economics, international relations, journalism or business, you will want to apply to one of these unique six-week programs. Numerous scholarships are available. While living on the campus of Georgetown University, you will: " Attend two classes at Georgetown University. Taught by Georgetown University faculty, students earn six credit hours for coursework " Intern on Capitol Hill, government offices, private sector organizations, news bureaus or press offices - Attend weekly lectures with foreign policy experts, noted journalists, or government affairs professionals " Meet and question national leaders at on-site briefings at various Washington, D.C. locations The application deadlines are: 1/7/92 Early Decision - 2/15/92 Regular Decision For more information contact The Fund for American Studies 152618th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036/202-986-0384 Former grad student sues CIA to get surveillance files released --EAD THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS by Jennifer Silverberg director for operations at the time, Daily Staff Reporter decided in 1989 that the rest of A former University student has filed suit against the CIA, charging that the agency illegally spied on him and then refused to release his file. Daniel Tsang, a former Univer- sity graduate student and research assistant who now studies sur- eillance methods, began to suspect during his studies that the CIA had a file on him. He requested his file from the CIA, citing the Privacy Act and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The CIA responded to his re- quest June 7, 1988 under the Privacy Act and released two pages of an ar- ticle th'at Tsang wrote for a 1979 is- *ue of the Library Journal in which he reviewed anti-surveillance periodicals. Richard Stolz, the CIA deputy Tsang's file could not be released for national security reasons. "I was surprised that my file was in operations because I thought it would be in the research side - that's what I write about. It means 'There are a lot of people that the CIA doesn't like and they're friends of mine' -Daniel Tsang University alumnus that they did some covert action against me, otherwise there was no need for the file to be in the opera- tions branch," Tsang said. Tsang said one reason they might not have released the rest of his file was because it could reveal personal Correction A Daily editorial on Oct. 23 incorrectly stated that transportation to an Alcohol Awareness Week event at Briarwood Mall was not provided by MSA organizers. A University bus offered free rides to the event. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today phone calls he believes the CIA wiretapped. "They don't want to reveal how they collected the information because it is illegal to, domestically tap phones of American citizens," he said. "They may also think I had ac- cess to classified information be- cause I indexed two books for peo- ple who used to work at the CIA. But I didn't. The manuscript I got was already declassified," Tsang said. Tsang is asking the CIA to pro- cess his file under FOIA, release it, cease further collection of informa- tion on him, pay attorney's fees and for any other relief that the court sees as proper. Tsang also hopes to force the CIA to produce. an index that would contain a description of each document or piece of informa- tion in the file and a reason it was not released. "I'm not just in it for the money," Tsang said. "There are a lot of people that the CIA doesn't like and they're friends of mine. I don't want to be under surveillance every time I meet them." The government has 60 days to reply to Tsang's complaint. Critics say bill hurts home rule, wetlands LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Critics characterized legislation to ban local wetlands protection mea- sures as an assault on both the envi- ronment and the power of munici- palities to set their own standards yesterday. "This bill strikes at the heart of local control," said Gene Thornton, director of legislative affairs for the Michigan Townships Ass- ociation. "It completely eliminates the ability of local government to effectively control wetlands in their jurisdiction." Environmentalists joined in the outcry. "This is the first attempt of many to pre-empt local efforts at environmental protection," said David Stead, executive director of the Michigan Environmental l-a umn.111atnnrly.. rw Meetings Time and Relative Dimensions in Ann Arbor, weekly mtg. 2439 Mason,8 p.m. International Program in Jamaica and the West Indies, informational mtg. 111 W. Engineering, noon. Speakers "Obesity: Its Developmental and Adaptive Origins," A. Roberto Frisancho,. 300 N. Ingalls Bldg, Rm 1000, noon. "Problems of Lithological and Chemical Evolution of Sedimentary Rock," Alexander Ronov. 1640 Chem, 4 p.m. Al Sharpton and Moses Stewart. Power Center, 7:30. "Manufacturing Challenge for the U.S. Automotive Industry," Eric Reickert of the Chrysler Corp. 1200 EECS, 45:30. Furthermore Safewalk, night-time safety walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.- 1:20 a.m. and Northwalk, North Campus safety walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. and Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m.-l 1:30 p.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763- WALK. "The Fire and the Rose," film. MLB, 3rd floor conf rm, noon. Al Sharpton protest. Power Center, 7:30. Frederick Busch, visiting writers series. Rackham Amphitheater, 8 p.m. ECB Peer Writing Tutors. An- gell/Mason Computing Center, 7-11. Church Street, 7-9. U-M Swim Club, Tuesday workout. IM Pool, 6:30-8:30. Women's Rugby, Tuesday practice. Mitchell Field, 5:45-8 p.m. "Inherit the Wind," film. Angell Aud A, 9 p.m. Custodial Appreciation Week, Supervisor's Day. "Revolution in the United States: The Civil War," SPARK Revolutionary History Series. MLB Rrn B122, 7-8. Lesbian Survivors of Sexual Assault, workshop. Quaker Friend's Meetina I