The Michigan Daily- Monday, October 12, 1992 - Page 3 U-M bus service irks late students by Yawar Murad U-M bus service from Central to North Campus has come under fire lately from students who complain that the buses do not run on schedule. Matthew Houser, a first-year Engineering student, criticized the fact that buses to and from North Campus must take a detour to avoid crossing the unstable Fuller bridge. "It is becoming apparent that this will be a long-term problem," he said. "I think it is about time the University Transportation Service took action to minimize inconve- nience to the passengers. The least they can do is publish a revised bus schedule." However, the Transportation Services office had a different story to tell. Patrick Cunningham, Transportation Services manager, claimed that the buses run accord- 71,000 U.S. college students will study abroad in 1993 I JOHN KAVAUAUSKAS/Daily Annoyed students wait for the bus to take them to North Campus. ing to the times printed on the schedule, even though the schedule refers to the old route. He said 90 percent of the time, the buses keep to the printed sched- ule, with traffic problems and other delays accounting for the other 10 percent. Stacy Carns, an LSA sopho- more, said last Sunday morning, when she was going to work from North campus to Central campus, she waited at the North Campus Recreation Building bus stop for 40 minutes. Cunningham said the 40 minute gaps between buses on weekends occur because bus drivers change shifts. She said the U-M needs more buses on the route, especially with winter quickly approaching. She added, "(The Transportation Service) should make the bus ser- vice more convenient for the stu- dents, especially on weekends." Usman Qureshi, an Engineering sophomore, said, "The buses do not run according to schedule, which causes a lot of time to be wasted." KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) - A growing demand for professionals with an international perspective has pushed American colleges to offer students what a small Michigan school has required for years: for- eign study. Nearly 90 percent of Kalamazoo College's graduates have studied overseas since 1962, while fewer than 3 percent of all American col- lege students are expected to study abroad. An estimated 71,000 U.S. stu- dents are expected to go abroad this year, and 250 of them will be from Kalamazoo, said Michael Vande Berg, director of foreign study at the college. "We really are preparing the stu- dents for the changes taking place in the world," Vande Berg said. "We have been doing for 30 years what a lot of schools will be trying to do in the near future." David Hornung, director of inter- national programs at St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., agreed. About 40 percent of that school's graduates have studied abroad. "The idea is that the world is get- ting smaller, and as nations become more interdependent you simply cannot continue a policy of isolation- ism anywhere," Hornung said. Cynthia Schmidt, director of Kalamazoo's African studies pro- gram said in 1962 the S.R. Light Foundation set up an endowment for the 1,270-student private school to subsidize the foreign studies incor- porated into the curriculum that year. Campus life at Kalamazoo also points toward foreign study-. Roughly 30 students live in so-called Language Houses, where students are immersed in French, German, Japanese or Spanish language and culture. "Some of the students have at- tained such a level of proficiency in their language of choice that they can actually attend universities abroad and enroll in classes along- side native students, instead of join- ing special foreign exchange pro- grams," Kalamazoo spokesperson Scotty Allen said. One night in late August, a group of women harmonized offstage in Dalton Theater near downtown Kalamazoo. They sang in Ewe, one of several languages spoken in Ghana, and wore brightly colored wraparound skirts and white head dresses. A dozen other students milled about the auditorium, some dancing, others practicing on African talking drums. It was the final rehearsal for a performance project capping a sum- mer of introductory African studies. This month, the students will study abroad at universities in Sierra Leone, Kenya and Senegal. Michelle Ferguson, a student at the University of Cincinnati, jumped at the chance to study abroad through Kalamazoo. She plans to work in the public schools around Freetown and hopes to pick up as many languages as possible in the port city known for its many ethnic groups. U-M to host SEAC forum by Gwen Shaffer Daily Environmental Issues Reporter Students interested in learning more about environ- mental activism can attend the Student Environmental Action Coalition (SEAC) conference to be held at the U-M Oct. 16-18. The conference - which plans to draw students in- volved in grassroots movements from Illinois, Michigan and Indiana - is aimed at educating students working on forest issues, urban and industrial issues, Great Lakes and "zero discharge" plans, and international trade issues. SEAC differs from many mainstream environmental organizations for several reasons, said program orga- nizer Jeff Turner. Mainly, it is a student-led and -run organization with members on more than 1,200 college and high school campuses. Participants strive to build connections be- tween social and environmental problems, based on the philosophy that the environment is being degraded not just because humans abuse the earth, but because they abuse each other. "Environmental degradation is a form of oppression which has the same roots as the oppression of women and people of color," Turner said. "These same societal forces ate driving the system." Turner said the conference aims to instill a sense of empowerment in the students who attend. "Seeing normal, everyday community organizers - not politicians or professors, but the people really af- fected by the issues - as leaders for the environmental movement is quite empowering." The conference is centered around five "action sem- inars," each tackling a different social issue. An intro- duction to campus ecology will audit how environmen- tally sound campuses are, from pollution control to re- cycling, all the way to the types of investments universi- ties make. U-M students can register for the conference for $10. Red Cross plans to evacuate in Bosnia SARAJEVO, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP) - Red Cross of- ficials made plans yesterday to evacuate 3,000 women and children from the besieged Bosnian capital, where food and fuel are desperately short. Intense fighting was reported overnight around the city, and yes- terday government troops pounded an arc of land linking rebel Serb ter- ritories in the north. But for the first time since the U.N. Security Council banned mili- tary flights over the breakaway Yugoslav republic last week, there were no reports that Serb rebels staged air raids on government-held cities. In Serbia, the dominant partner in the new Yugoslavia, voters went to the polls to decide whether parlia- mentary and presidential elections should be moved up. Opponents view the hastily called referendum as a ploy by hard-liners to hold onto power despite worldwide condemna- tion of Yugoslavia's role in instigat- ing the ethnic bloodshed in Bosnia. Around Sarajevo, residents grimly welcomed heavy rains that helped to ease a dire water shortage. Steady bombardments were re- ported during the night near the capi- tal's airport, the old town and the suburbs of Stup and Ilidza. Nine mortar rounds landed Saturday near Camp Beaver, the U.N. peacekeepers post near the air- port, but none of the U.N. troops was hurt, U.N. spokesperson Mik Magnusson said. Pava Barisic, an official with the Red Cross in Sarejevo, said relief workers were trying to organize a convoy to carry 3,000 women and children out of the capital on Tuesday. JOHN KAVALIAUSKAS/Daily Waiting game Michigan fans wait outside of Crisler Arena yesterday to apply for season basketball tickets. Approximately 4,500 students applied for season tickets, with some waiting in line since 5:30 Saturday afternoon. For more details, see SPORTSMonday. Student groups Q Environmental Action Coali- tion, meeting, School of Natu- ralResources,room 1040,7 p.m. Q Indian American Students As- sociation, board meeting, Michigan League, room A, 7 p.m. Q Michigan Women's Rugby Club, practice, East Mitchell Field, 8-10 p.m. Q Newman Catholic Student As- sociation, Administration/Fi- nance Committee,6 p.m.; RCIA, 7 p.m.; Liturgical Formation Seminar, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, 7:30 p.m.; Saint Mary Student Chapel, 331 Thompson St. Q Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, practice, CCRB, Martial Arts Room, 7:45-8:45 p.m. Q UAC/Comedy Company Writ- ers',meeting, Michigan Union, room 2105, 7 p.m. Q Undergraduate Philosophy Club, meeting/mixer, Angell Hall, room 2220,6:30 p.m. Q U-M Ninjitsu Club, practice, I.M. Building, Wrestling Room G21, 7:30-9 p.m. Q U-M Outing Club, canoe trip planning meeting, Michigan Union, 4th floor lobby, 8 p.m. level Multi-Purpose Room, 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. Q Career Planning and Place- ment, Law Day, Michigan Union, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.; Law Day Panel, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 3:10-4 p.m.; Marketing Your Abilities: The Successful Job Seeker's Per- spective, CP&P Program Room, 4:10-5:30 p.m. Q Church Music Conference, Or- gan Recital, Blanche Anderson Moore Hall, 11:30 a.m.; Stu- dentRecital, Hill Auditorium, 4 p.m. Q "Columbus Didn't Discover Us," Ella Baker-Nelson Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Education, East Engineering Building, room 3, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Q "Emotions & Reason: The Ob- jectivist View," U-M Students of Objectivism, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 8 p.m. Q "Focus on Michigan," photog- raphy contest, City of Ann Ar- bor Parks and Recreation De- partment is accepting entries until December 1, 1992, contact Irene Bushaw, 994-2780 Q Guild House Writers Series, writers reading from their own tein," Department of Chemis- try, Chemistry Building, room 1640,4 p.m. Q Revelations in Black, The Black Arts Council, School of Music, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Q Students Against Drunk Driv- ing, mass meeting, Michigan Union, Ponds Room, 7:15 p.m. Q Sukkot Services, Orthodox Ser- vices, Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., 9:30 a.m. & 6:40 p.m. Q "The Confrontation: Latinas Fight Back Against Rape," Ella Baker-Nelson Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Educa- tion, Angell Hall, room 2231,6- 8 p.m. Student services Q Free Introductory "Smoke Free" Session, a stop smoking program offered by University Health Services, 3rd floor Con- ference Room, 12-1 p.m. Q Northwalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, Bursley Hall, lobby, 8 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. Q Psychology Undergraduate Peer Advising, sponsored by Dept. of Psychology, West Quad, re'm K210, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. THE BEST DEFENSE AGAINST RAPE - 80 TIMES more effective than MACE . 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