7WINTERS 9gonlnued from Page 1A Winters last Tuesday when Davis arrived at his ex-wife's home to drop off a car. "My brother stopped him before he could come in the house and told him to urn over the keys and don't come Ack," Malik Winters told the Free Press. Davis threw car keys toward the Ouse before getting into a friend's car. "He said something to my brother - sontething like, 'Be a man. We can han- dle this right now' - and it got my brother provoked," Malik Winters said. .Malik Winters told the Free Press he called his brother to the house that night after hearing Davis would be coming over. Jessie Jordan, Davis' sister, told the Free Press on Sunday that the relation- ship between Davis and Winters' moth- r was "amicable" after their uncontest- ed divorce four years ago. 'But Earthy Winters charged that Davis "... has in the past threatened (Earthy Winters) with serious bodily injiry (and) that (Davis') actions towards (her) is threatening severe and irreparable injury (and) that ... (he) did thwaten to kill (her), according to 'Wayne County divorce court papers. . Jordan told the Free Press her broth- i 'underwent surgery for six hours to epair a massive blood clot in his head 'cabsed by severe blows. -Davis was listed yesterday in critical but stable condition in Grace Hospital's Intensive Care Unit. He has been at the Dtroit hospital since Nov. 12. When Davis is discharged, he might face more jail time for a parole viola- tion, said Michigan Department of Corrections spokesperson Gail Light. .The department issued a warrant for his arrest Nov. 8 when Davis stopped eporting to his parole officer Oct. 28, Light said. 4 "He would go to one of our institu- tins, and he would have a parole revo- cation hearing to decide whether to revoke his parole and put him in prison," Light said. "Not showing up for parole is a serious offense'." Davis has been in and out of the Michigan prison system since 1976 after corhfmitting armed robbery and break- n{g and entering, prison records state. While in prison for two drug viola- tions, Davis escaped from the Brooks Co-rectional Facility on July 20, 1992, in Muskegon. He was captured in February 1993 and received an addition- al two- to five-year sentence for the prison escape. He was paroled Dec. 15, 1995. LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 21, 1996 - 9A CLOSING Continued from Page 1A owner of both businesses, was unavailable for comment. Student reaction to the reports was one of shock, although some had suspected the poor health conditions for a while. LSA sophomore Eric Lee said he had heard rumors of the poor sanitary conditions. "It was scary," Lee said in response to the details. "They didn't look like dirty places." Paula Habib, an LSA first-year stu- dent, visited NAC regularly and was " It wi unaware of the report's findings. "I went there once every few weeks," d d Habib said. "I like it a lot - it was T somewhere everyone could go."lke "It doesn't make me feel good," l e i Habib said. "I always have the fear that whenever I'm eating at a restaurant or cafeteria it's not clean, but to think that it barely passed the test is kind of scary." But LSA junior An-Soo Chang, who liked eating at Salad Days, did not think the scores were so bad and was not very concerned. "I never got sick. I didn't have any problems with (Salad Days)" Chang said. "I'm a very satisfied customer. Very sat- isfied." Chang added, "I've (eaten) at worse places. If I don't get sick and I like the food I'd probably go there." Laura Harley, an LSA first-year student, appreciated that NAC tried to offer the community a different type of business with a unique atmosphere but was concerned with the results of the inspections. "It definitely bothers me," Harley said. Harley added that government agencies don't always do enough to maintain health regulations. "I used to work in a fast-food place. They'd clean up the m s' place the day before (the inspection)," Harlcy said. "(The gov- ernment officials) try. Their guidelines are very good but unless you have frequent inspections they don't really work." The health reports and closures came during proceedings by NAC's management to buy Mitch's Place, located directly above NAC on South University. "The NAC approached Mitch to buy Mitch's Place," said Jody Thompson, general manager of Mitch's Place. "We did not run (Mitch's Place) during June, July, August and September. It was being run by people from the NAC," Thompson said. scary. John Whitmore, a member of the staff at Mitch's Place, said that Mitch's philosophy is "if it's not plce going to be run properly, it's not ' e * going to be run at all." - Erin Lee "Whatever happened bad in that SA sophomore period of time, Mitch had nothing to do with it," Whitmore said. Thompson noted that cleanliness is something Mitch's Place takes pride in, but added that the NAC inspection results were not important in the deal that eventually fell through. "(The reports) didn't play a role in the decision," Thompson said. NAC and Salad Days were originally co-founded by Scott Severance, who received an engineering degree in 1991 and a master's in business administration in 1993 from the University, and decided to stay in Ann Arbor to pursue his business ideas. "This is probably where we know the most about the market and the people," Severance told The Michigan Daily in an unrelated interview conducted in November 1995. Severance said, "It's a good environment to test out a lot of ideas." LANSING (AP) - House Speaker- elect Curtis Hertel said yesterday that reports claiming he does not live in his district are false. The reports have been spread by a few members of the Detroit firefighter and police officer unions angered by Hertel's opposition to a bill that would lift Detroit's residency requirement for city workers, the Detroit Democrat said. Hertel, currently the House minority leader, takes over as speaker in January. WXYZ-TV in Southfield reported last week that Hertel does not live in the 2nd district in northeast Detroit that he represents in the Legislature. Instead, the station reported, he lives in another Detroit neighborhood nearby. Hertel disputed that this week in Lansing. "My residence is in the district. I live there;" he said. The television station's report was based in part on various records and listings that give different Detroit addresses for Hertel - one for a home in his district and one for a home just outside its boundaries. The lawmaker said he owns both houses. He lives in the one inside the 2nd district, while his family lives at the other address, he said. "Sometimes I live here (in Lansing). Sometimes I live at my residence. And sometimes I live with my family" Hertel said. Rep. denies false residency allegations F a I TESTING Continued from Page 1A Goldfarb agreed. "I never specifically look for students for studies," he said. "I see no advan- tages or disadvantages to using a stu- dent rather than someone else" He said students usually become sub- jects in his studies simply because they are a segment of the population that has a condition that he treats - acne. But while Pharmacy Prof. Sally Guthrie said she does not specifically target students, she pointed out that using students can have its advantages. "Students are actually fairly good to study because, for the most part, stu- dents are fairly intelligent (so they understand the research)," she said. "I really prefer to actually have people who understand what I'm doing" Guthrie, who usually tests drug inter- actions, said that when subjects have an understanding of the purpose of the study, they are more likely to trust the researcher. Researchers said student participa- tion in studies varies. Goldfarb, who usually tests medications for skin con- ditions, said students volunteer for his studies "pretty frequently" Schmaier, who uses students to donate blood for his research on plasma proteins and platelets, said student participation is at about 20-30 percent. Besides participating in medical studies, students also act as volunteers in studies conducted by the psychology department. As part of the requirement for introductory psychology courses, students are given the option of partici- pating in five hders' worth of studies or writing a paper. Brian DeSmet, an LSA sophomore, said he participated in a study that test- ed how well students knew general- knowledge questions and how certain they were that their answers were cor- rect. These results were then compared to those of students in other countries. "I guess it was to measure almost how cocky students were from each country," he said. "Doing the actual experiment wasn't too bad." LSA sophomore Mark Bieszki said he liked participating as a research sub- ject. "I thought it was interesting to see how they conduct the research "he said. He also said the researchers debriefed the students well to make sure they understood the intent of the study. "I got something out of it. It's not just like I was doing it blindly," he said. LSA sophomore Steven Munger, though, said he did not enjoy his expe- rience. "I think a lot of the experiments we do are crazy. They're unreasonable," Munger said. Prof. James Hilton, undergraduate chair of psychology, said exposing stu- dents to research techniques is one of the reasons for including the research subject requirement in introductory psychology courses. "Most students come into an intro- ductory psychology course believing that psychology is a nonscientific discipline concerned exclusively with helping," Hilton said. 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