LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, January 28, 1997 - 3 Students injured in Mason Hall Several students were allegedly involved in a fight in Mason Hall on ay, Department of Public Safety r rts state. One suspect suffered a bleeding head wound and was taken to the University Hospitals emergency room by a Huron Valley ambulance. The suspect said, he accidentally bumped his head and was not assault- ed.-Three of the suspects were checked for outstanding warrants, but none were found. Sank alarm goes off, nothing taken Ann Arbor Police Department offi- cers responded to an alarm at the Ann Arbor Credit Bureau last Wednesday night. But when they initially checked the building, it appeared secure from the side. But employees arrived the t morning, they found the build- ing had been broken into through an outside basement door. AAPD reports said nothing appeared to have been taken. Bursley room burglarized twice The same room in Burslcy residence I 'was burglarized twice in the last week, DPS reports state. The room, in' Bursley's Douglas House, was most recently broken into on Sunday. The victim reported that text books bought to replace those stolen earlier in the week were the only items taken from the room. The value of the books is $659 per set. The vic- tim lives in VanHousen house, but the Os were left in her boyfriend's room in Douglas. Student uses fake permit, A student was found using a home- made parking permit last Friday, DPS reports state. DPS officers found the permit had a student address space, but wed only a permanent address. e student was located and given a citation for having displayed the fake permit. DPS confiscated the permit. The suspect said he found the home- made permit inside Bursley resi- dence hall. 2 heads collide, iuries occur Two people hit their heads together Saturday at the Central Campus Recreation Building, according to DPS reports. One of the suspects was found on the ground with a large amount of blood near his head. The first subject was escorted to the University Hospitals emergency room. The other subject c ye himself to the hospital to receive tment. Gate arm broken on Thayer Street The gate arm at the Thayer Street carport was reported as malfunctioning o iSunday. Soon after the call, the arm was broken off its hinge, according to q reports. e caller told DPS the gate arm was not releasing vehicles. Subjects then broke off the arm to leave the carport. The caller refused to give descriptions of the subjects. Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jenni Yachnin. Faculty hope athletes will tackle new fields of study By Janet Adamy Daily Staff Reporter The University's Division of Kinesiology traditionally has been over- populated by athletes - but some fac- ulty members said they are ready to see these student athletes study something outside the science of movement. "What we've basically found is that there's a very high concentration of stu- dent athletes in the Kinesiology depart- ment;' said Education Prof. Percy Bates. Bates discussed NCAA accreditation issues when he addressed the Senate Assembly at its monthly meeting yester- day in the Rackham Ampitheater. Bates is the faculty's representative to the University's NCAA Athletics Certification Steering Committee. At the meeting, he presented six "key recommendations" that came out of the Academic Integrity Subcommittee's self-evaluation - part of the NCAA's two-part process for accreditation. Among the subcommittee's major concerns was the issue of student ath- letes in the Kinesiology department. "We've found that there's a view that that is where they should be and where they will be successful," Bates said, adding that this viewpoint limited stu- dents' academic perspectives. Other subcommittee objectives include improving the opportunity for student athletes to transfer from Kinesiology to other schools and colleges and ensure that student athletes under- stand what admission to Kinesiology means if it is the applicant's only admis- sions option at the University. Other concerns include developing a plan that would help student athletes gain admission to the courses they want, examining training requirements in the off-season and eliminating extended travel for training and compe- tition when it conflicts with the acade- mic calendar. Education Prof. Milan Marich said he is concerned by the lack of counsel-- ing student athletes receive. "I've worked with some of these kids that want to get out (of Kinesiology) and they don't really know how to," Marich said. "(Departments) need to give them some counseling that will explain their options." Although the subcommittee is not required to implement its initiatives before the University becomes accredit- ed, Bates said the initiatives will be worked on during the year. "When all of this is done, it is my hope that the committee will go back and look at each recommendation and decide the appropriate person or unit in the University and work with them until the fruition of it." Bates said. Chemistry Prof. Thomas Dunn, chair of the faculty's governing body and a former collegiate athlete, said the chance that a student athlete will be able to earn a living as a profes- sional athlete is less than one-tenth of a percent. "The only way we can help altogeth- er is to give them something of value so that if they don't go into athletics, they have something they can go on with," Dunn said. Eating disorder week hits campus By Brian Campbell Daily Staff Reporter Many University students suffering from eating disorders - like anorexia and bulimia - treat their condition like a secret. But the planners of Eating Disorders Awareness week are hoping to confront these issues out in the open in the coming days. Paula Herzog, University nutritional specialist for Housing, said eating dis- orders are common at the University. "It's too prevalent - way too preva- lent," Herzog said. "Half of all first- year women students are found to have "There are a lot of different explana- tions about how people develop eating disorders," said Vicki Hayes, a University psychologist and counselor at UHS. "I find the reason for develop- ing them are about as individual as the person I'm seeing." Woodruff said young women often choose to eat poorly because they are insecure about their appearance, and adjust their diets because it's something they can change. "It's about pressure - it's one thing they can control," she said But people suffering from anorex- significant eat- ing and body appearance dis- orders." "itt's too JOHN KRAFT/Daily Carrying the tune The Universitys School of Music's Wind Ensemble performed at Hill Auditorium last night In honor of Mozart's 241st birthday. The ensemble is conducted by H. Robert Reynolds. Archer to address Detroit s eale a Pamphlets p easn describing nutrition and t areva eating disor- ders, along - with flyers urg- ing letter-writ- Univer ing campaigns to magazines and TV stations that por- tray ultra-thin models in advertise- ments, will be available at information tables in the Angell Hall Fishbowl today and at the Central Campus Recreation Building later this week. A "Body Image" discussion in the School of Public Health Building and an interactive program about treating eating disorders are planned for Thursday at the Michigan League. Devon Woodruff, an Engineering sophomore and president of Sigma Kappa sorority, said eating disorders are not uncommon in the Greek system. "I would say it's prevalent in a lot of sororities - it seems like it's big on campus everywhere," she said. Many said there are no blanket expla- nations for the prevalence of eating dis- orders. S-way 3rent. " - Paula Herzog sity nutritionist ia, bulimia and other disorders, usually cannot control their: bodies, though they try to con- vince them- selves they can. "Oftentimes, eating disorders are associated with a sense of DETROIT (AP) - The city's devel- opment momentum will be the center- piece of Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer's State of the City address tonight, his spokesperson says. But Archer, who will deliver his third annual address, will not gloss over the challenges ahead, Anthony Neely told The Detroit News yesterday. "And he wants to talk about how we produced the momentum that exists in the city today, and what's needed to improve the process of making Detroit a greater cit,' Neely said. "That would include increasing private investments, making our neighborhoods more attrac- tive and improving city services." Detroit political analyst Mario Morrow predicted Archer also will ask for more volunteerism to bring economic and social harmony to the city. But Morrow and other analysts agree that Archer has much to boast about his record in 1996. Last year's accomplishments include deals for new Tigers and Lions stadi- ums, $80 million in development around Orchestra Hall and the General Motors Corp. purchase of the Renaissance Center as its new head- quarters. Others include the announce- ment of a Hard Rock Cafe, state-desig- nated renaissance zones and the possi- bility of a Detroit Government Center in the GM building. Michigan voters authorized three downtown casinos. Developers plan subdivisions, condominiums and town houses around the city. Some residents would rather Archer spend more effort on making the city livable by improving trash pickup and police service. Peter Koester, a 38-year-old resident, said city services are deplorable. "If you ever try to deal with the city, it's a nightmare. I have been try- ing to get a city of Detroit income tax form mailed to me for three months. I have no street lights, and I waited for nine hours for the police to respond to gunfire in my neigh- borhood," he said. secrecy and shame - people often don't want to talk about it," Hayes said. Many young women say they disap- prove of the recent wave of fashion advertisements portraying waif-like models. "I find it obnoxious," Woodruff said, "Every single model on TV and in the, magazines is a twig - I get kind ofsick when I look at the magazines." Hayes criticized editors of magazines such as Cosmopolitan, Glamour and Vogue. "I would tell them that if they would spend as much time, energy and money advertising how women can be healthy and happy with who they are instead of who they should be, that would go a long way toward solving the problem," Hayes said. Catch the Daily online wwwpvub .umich.edu/dily/ Judge says papers guilty of wronging strikers / a ow' o w/f. DETROIT (AP) -- Four Booth newspapers unfairly kept striking Detroit newspaper pressmen from working as substitutes in their press- rooms, an administrative law judge has ruled. Administrative Law Judge Robert Schwarzbart upheld a complaint against The Bay City Times, The Flint Journal, The Grand Rapids Press and The Saginaw News. The complaint was filed by the Graphic Communications Union Local 13N and the AFL-CIO, and supported by the National Labor Relations Board. Schwarzbart's order was dated Jan. 22. "It's a good step in the right direc- tion," NLRB regional director William Schaub said yesterday. "Essentially, these people had applied for jobs, and the employers refuse to take them. The judge agreed with me that the reason these people were not hired was because they were striking." The unions alleged that the news- papers ordered them not to let strik- ing pressmen fill in as substitutes shortly after the strike began July 13, 1995, against the Detroit Free Press, The Detroit News and their business and production agency, Detroit Newspapers Inc. 77 7 GRoUP ME 7LILI ~-ALLN A What's happening in Ann Arbor today Altera Corporation, located 7 - If you can't visit us on in hn nmr ofCil +n Vmlnt rnm mzpni vi mrpg tm toI me tnIearcI or11 QlILcUIvanety ETINGS U Allanza, 995-6732, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 7:30 p.m. UAnthropology Club, Film and discus- sion, 663-3139, LSA Building, room 8134, 8:30 p.m. U Black Undergraduate Law Association, Mass Meeting, 332- 6122 Michigan Union, Welker Room, 7 p.m. lChaverim, Hillel, 1429 Hill Street, 7 p.m. U Cleptomanlacs And Shoplifters Anonymous (CASA), self-help roup, 913-6990, First Baptist hurch, 512 E. 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