2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 1, 1994 zSACUA "Continued from page 1. and periodic evaluations of deans. Currently, there is a experimental evaluation of deans in place. Alfredo Montalvo: Montalvo admits he is a novice to the faculty governance game, but he plans to study the issues before he takes his seat in May. "I feel it my responsibility now to steep myself in what is going on. Iam going to try to learn what are the issues on the table and where I stand on them," he said. Although he may lack knowledge of SACUA issues, Montalvo hope to create a better relationship with the administration by stressing open com- munication and mutual respect. "We won't always agree, but we have to respect each others' opinion. I don't have to agree with you to work productively," he said. Montalvo added the administra- tion often ignores the views of the faculty when making major decisions. He said this discourages faculty from choosing to teach at the University. "We have to start thinking about the principals that the University was founded on. When people work out of disrespect you send out a very bad signal," he said. Ronald Lomax: Lomax is a SACUA veteran re- turning for his second tour of duty on the committee. He wants SACUA to remain fo- cused on its current issues such as the changing nature of tenure appoint- ments, faculty governance and griev- ance procedure reform. He also suggests a few changes in the relationship with the administra- tion in the future. "One of the things we want to do is get more direct communication with the regents. Right now the channel of communication is through the admin- istration," he said. "If the administra- tion wants to shade things a little bit, they can.'' Lomax said both Senate Assem- bly and SACUA have the potential to be powerful advocates for the faculty. "The SenateAssembly and SACUA are not completely powerless. It does U q CELEBRATE HOLY WEEK! AT THE WESLEY FOUNDATION a campus ministry at 602 E. Huron at State *EEE0EmEp represent the faculty in general, but it takes a long time," he said. Lomax said the key lies in com- manding the administration's attention. "There is a lot of feeling around here that the administration and the faculty are just on different wavelengths." STOCK Continued from page 1 The decline does not reflect any fundamental weakness in the economy, nor any real inflation pres- sure, a senior administration official insisted, but "unfortunately, these things can go on for a very long time." With the Dow Jones industrial average up 9.21 points after a 67- point drop earlier, there was some- thing to celebrate, although many trad- ers said they wondered what next week would bring. A surge of new jobs is expected to be reported Friday -bad news for stocks at a time when investors think good economic news means inflation - and mortgage in- terest rates were reported yetserday at their highest level more than a year. "The stock market had a very rapid run up last year," Clinton said. "It might have been a little bit too high, and maybe a lot of this is people just kind of working that out." Senior administration officials and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan last year discussed the problems posed by an overheated market, and some analysts believe that a desire to slowly let some air out of the market contributed to the Fed's moves so far this year to raise interest rates - a view that administration officials who have talked with Greenspan do not dispute. WHITEWATER Continued from page 1 campus are glad the questions are being asked by reporters and the spe- cial counsel, Robert B. Fiske. "I don't think too much is being made out of it," said Hope Dotson, an LSA first-year student. "It is impor- tant that this thing is not pushed under the rug." Chamberlin said, "Maybe people should be interested. It may not be as interesting as Tonya Harding, but it is important." Although few were quick to con- vict President Clinton, many felt something questionable had occured in Whitewater, the 1970s land devel- opment corporation that bought land in rural Arkansas. "It is a little bit shady," said LSA first-year student Samantha Malti n. "I'm a littleuncomfortable with a president engaging in something like that." Chamberlin said it is natural for people to expect more out of the presi- dent. "We have higher standards for our elected officials." Ambrose questioned whether such high standards could be met by any- body. "I don't think anyone could un- dergo the scrutiny the Clintons' taxe were subjected to and come out look- ing completely innocent," he said. But much of the campus commu- nity considers Whitewater a waste of time. "I usually skim the articles on Whitewater," said political science sophomore Julie Perkins. "It's not really all that relevant." LSA first-year student Beck* Karbowski-said, "It happened a long time ago; I'm more concerned about what they're doing today." Many people said that the reason they were not interested in Whitewater was because they are not as informed on the issue as they should be. LSA first-year student Amy Henry put partial blame on the media for the confusion surrounding Whitewater. "The media is not cluing in th average person into what's going on," she said. Ambrose said the reason so many people are confused about the contro- versy is that they don't make the ef- fort to understand the issues. "Most people don't take the time to read the newspaper which is where you find the details," he said. "In- stead, all they get is sound bites an* TV blips from the nightly news." ® _ _ sh- mr. mmI- Holy Thursday: 6:00 pm Good Friday: 7:30 pm Easter Sunday: 7:00 am 10:00 am Noon 5:00 pm foot-washing communion Sedar Meal & Tennebre service (a service of lights) Sunrise Service in the Arb College Class Easter brunch Celebration Service PRINTING HIGH QUAL/TY LOW PRICES 1002 PoNTIAC TR. 994-1367 DRUG USE Continued from page 1 ComeJoin Us! for more information call 668-6881 'Nitrous is very, very quick feeling of ... your hearing becomes altered so that things U "" m.m ( ______ -4 %-, II V .... I Kathryn P. O'Brien M 6 .S.W., A.C.S.W. 63-2973 Counseling -Individua Prizes From: CEVflER U3 What Is It? "Invaders" will be at your door and will ask you for recyclables. If you have some and you've prepared them correctly, you may win a prize! When. and Where? Mon. Apr. 4th - S.Quad (8-10pm) Tue. Apr. 5th - E. Quad (7-9pm) Wed. Apr. 6th - Markley (7-9pm) Thur. Apr. 7th - Bursley (7-9pm) Ask your R.A. or see your hall poster for more details. Invadina? Prizes From: CAVA JAVA. SPSSO IYALE AE ;I * Couples I A Who will be A. P.O. Staff & Residents From Your I fall culating in University students' bod- ies. Other illicit drugs were used by 7 percent of undergraduate males and 3 percent of females, according to the University survey. Most of the students interviewed said they had seen a lot of psychedelic mushrooms, LSD and nitrous oxide. And some had found such varied drugs as opium, speed (crystal methamphgetamine), hashish, peyote and the new designer drug, Ecstasy. Kevin, who smokes pot twice a week and uses mushrooms and Ec- stasy, "on occasion," has also experi- mented with "nitrous" in the form of both nitrous tanks and Whip-its, ob- tained by puncturing a whipped cream cartiridge and emtpying the gas into a balloon for easy inhaling. "Nitrous is a very, very quick feel- ing of ... your hearing becomes al- tered so that things begin to echo. You get light-headed. "It's very easy to pass out for like two seconds and be like totally out of it. It's like suffocating yourself al- most. It's like an instantaneous ex- plosion of, like, 'wow."' Apparently, some students think the 10 to 30 second rush is worth the risk, even when they see friends pass out halfway through inhaling a bal- loon, wake up a few seconds later and continue sucking. Mushrooms are a little easier to come by on the University, according to some students. "Billy," a senior who wished not to have his school identified, said he could find it within a week through the "network" of us- ers and dealers he has built up. However, having tried pot, acid, shrooms, speed, nitrous, opium and hash, Billy ranked shrooms as one of his least favorites. More favored is the other halluci- nogenic standby, acid. Kevin recalled one experience. "One of the greatest for me was a visual I had on the way back from a (Grateful) Dead show.... The entire wall was bright red and it turned into liquid. begin to echo' * - 'Kevin' "The wallpaper had little teeny gold dots, and all those gold dots turned into pores like little goose pimples opening up and letting out gas. ... I bugged out to it for like 15 minutes." Not all acid experiences are so positive. "Fred," an SNRE first-year' student, remembered when he hurt a friend physically while under the in- fluence. The friend had been throw- ing pebbles at him, and "It scared the fuck out of me so bad. I thought he was throwing big rocks at me and they were hurting me. ... I was so scared.... I kind of bruised up his face a little bit." A fairly new hallucinogen on the. market hasn not had the time to pro- duce such "bad trip" stories, at least not among University students. At about $25 a hit, it's pretty hard to come by. Kevin, who has experimented with it twice, said when he did it, "My body was more tuned into everything - like temperature, water, mist. If somebody's touching your arm, it just feels so nice. You open up, man." Speed, peyote, hash and opium are almost just as rare. Student drug users tend to like the standbys of pot, acid and shrooms, anyway. As for Hash Bash, we can expect to see plenty of stoned people out there, and some tripping. Bob plans to "hang out and smoke" tomorrow, but not on the Diag. "I've smoked on the Diag before, but not during Has*O Bash," he said. Kevin wants to do Ecstasy again, if he can get a hold of it. If not, he'll settle for drinking and getting stoned. J.D., however, who's trying toquit, plans "to get as far away from this campus as I can so I don't fail my drug test." (If you'd like to be an invader, talk to your R.A.) Question 7 Call Mark 0764-2662 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LAW SCHOOL Thomas M. Cooley Lectures Fortieth Series THE HABITS OF LEGALITY: CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND THE RULE OF LAW FRANCIS A. ALLEN Professor of Law Huber C. Hurst Eminent Scholar University of Florida Lecture I (Monday) : "The Intellectual Environment of Legality" Religious Services AVAVAVAVA ANN ARBOR CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 1717 Broadway (near N. Campus) 665-0105 SUNDAY: Traditional Service-9 a.m. Contemporary Service-11:15 a.m. Evening Service-6 p.m. Complete Education Program Nursery care available at all services CAMPUS CHAPEL (Christian Reformed campus ministry) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421/662-2402 lone block south of CCRBJ EXPLORE and ENJOY your FAITH SUNDAY: 10 a.m. - Easter Worship 6 p.m. - Easter Hymnsong WEDNESDAY: 9-10 p.m. - R.O.C.K. student gathering Fun, food, provocative discussion. Rev. Don Postema, pastor Ms. Barb O'Day, ministry to students CHRISTIAN LIFE CHURCH Schorling Auditorium School of Education SUNDAY: Service 11 am. HURON VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH Gay-Lesbian Ministry 741-1174 LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Lord of Light Lutheran Church, ELCA 801 S. Forest (at Hill St.), 668-7622 SATURDAY: Noon Lunch Ukrainian Easter Egg Workshop 11 p.m.-Ecumenical Easter Vigil SUND1AY: 10 a.m.-Easter Festival Worshi Free Brunch Following WEDNESDAY: 6 p.m. - Bible Study 7 p.m. - Evensong ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Roman Catholic Parish at U-M) 331 Thompson Street Weekend Liturgies Saturday: 5 p.m. SUNDAY: 8:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 12 noon, 5 p.m., and 7 p.m. FRIDAY: Confessions-4-5 p.m. rim i~rrhirn l:lii The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscrip tions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336: Opinion 7640552 Circulation 7640558; Classified advertising 7640557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. I EDITORIAL STAF .sse Hll'ay Eito nS he NEWS David Shepardson, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nate Hurley. Mona Qureshi, Karen Sabgir, Karen Talaski. STAFF: Robin Banry. Hope Calati, James R. Cho, Lashawnda Crowe, Rebecca Detken, Lisa Dines. Sam T. Dudek, Ronnie Glassberg. Michele Hatty, Katie Hutchins. Judith Kafka. Maria Kovac, Andrea MacAdam, Patricia Montgomery, James Q. Nash, Zachary M. Raimi, Rachel Scharfman, Megan Schimpf, Shari Sitron, Mpatanishi Tayari, Lara Taylor, Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing, April Wood. Scot Woods. CALENDAR EDITOR: Andrew Taylor. GRAPHICS: Jonathan Berndt (Editor), Kimberly Albert, Jennifer Angeles, Andrew Taylor EDITORIAL Sam GoodsteMn, Flint Wainess, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Julie Becker, Jason Lichtstein. STAFF: Cathy Boguslaski. Eugene Bowen, Jed Friedman, April Groff, Patrick Javid, Jeff Keating, Jim Lasser, Mo Park. Elise Smith, Allison Stevens, Beth, Wierzbinski. LETTERS EDITOR: Randy Hardin. SPORTS Chad A. Safrun, Mneghng Editor EDITORS: Rachel Bachman, Brett Forrest, Tim Rardin, Michael Rosenberg, Jaeson Rosenfeld. STAFF: Bob Abramson, Paul Barger, Tom Bausano. Charlie Breitrose. Aaron Bums. Scott Burton. Ryan Cuskaden, Marc Oiller. Darren Everson, Ravi Gopal. Ryan Herrington, Brett Johnson. Josh Kaplan, Josh Karp, Will McCahiilI. Brent McIntosh, Dan McKenzie. Antoine4 Pitts, Melinda Roco, JL. Rostam.Abadi. Melanie Schuman, Dave Schwartz, Tom Seeley, Brian Sklar, Tim Smith. Elise Sneed, Barny Sollenberger, Doug Stevens, Jeremy Strachan, Ken Sugiura, Ryan White, Heather Windt. ARTS Melissa Rose BemrdMIo, NMa Hodaei, Editors EDITORS: Jason Carroll (Theater). Tom Erlewine (Music), Rona Kobell (Books), Darcy Lockman (Weekend etc.). John R. Rybock (Weekend etc.). Michael Thompson (Film). STAFF: Jordan Atlas. Nicole Baker, Matt Carlson, Jin Ho Chung. Thomas Crowley, Andy Dolan, Ben Ewy, Johanna Flies. Josh Hlerrington, Kristen Knudsen. Karen Lee. Gianluce MontaftinHeather Phares, Scott Plagenhoef, Marni Raitt, Austin Ratner, Dirk Schulze, Liz Shaw, Sarah Stewart, Alexandra Twin, Ted Watts. PHOTO Michelle Guy, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF: Anastasia Banicki, Mark Friedman, Mary Koukhab, Elizabeth Lippman, Jonathan Lurie, Rebecca Margolis. Judith Perkins, Joe I I