LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily -- Tuesday, September 16, 1997 -- 7 Vinic asses offer spicy variety|Aar By Theresa Oney Far the Daily Interested in a class on Iridology? Beginning Sept. 22, University stu- dents can register for this miniclass and others at the Michigan Union Ticket office. Iridology, a holistic approach to ealing and taking care of the body, is just one of the four new miniclasses offered by the University Activities Center this semester. The other new courses include a prep course for the Law School Admissions Test, palm reading and cooking. UAC chose this year's new courses based on student demand and suggestions. These classes will be offered in addi- tion to a variety of miniclasses that were sccessful last year, ranging in subjects from bartending to ballroom dancing. Joanne Greenstein, a co-coordinator of the miniclasses, said the University- sponsored classes are solely organized by students. "These miniclasses are not unique to the University of Michigan. There are other colleges that have larger pro- grams, yet ours is the only one that is student-run," said Greenstein, an LSA junior. "We try to offer a wide variety of interesting classes." Kinesiology sophomore Greg Dairyko took a miniclass in bartending last year. He said the courses are "beneficial, especially if you have a lot of time on your hands, and you would like to learn about something that sounds fun and interesting" One drawback to the bartending class, Dairyko said, is that students had to use water instead of alcohol to mix drinks. But he said he would take anoth- er class if he had a lighter schedule. LSA junior Jill Kleiman, a co-coor- dinator of the miniclasses, said that last year UAC had a large demand for the miniclasses. Kleiman said she is certain that this year will beas successful. She said she hopes that many people will register for both last year's popular classes and the new courses offered this semester. Besides students, Ann Arbor resi- dents also enrolled in the classes. However, one exceptional case involves a New York resident. Kleiman received a phone call recently from a woman in Syracuse who's interested in taking a miniclass. "The minicourses attract not only stu- dents who attend this university, but also members of the community and people across the nation," said Kleiman, who started her position this year. LSA sophomore Jen Yang, who took an aerobics class last year, said the class was a great stress reliever. "At the end of a long day of classes, I looked forward to my aerobics class," Yang said. Despite her intent to go to the School of Business Administration, Yang want- ed to include something less serious in her schedule. She still missed a few ses- sions due to a heavy workload. Many instructors who run the mini- courses have been teaching the classes for years, and they are paid through the UAC office, Greenstein said. For more information about mini- course prices and availability, call the UAC office at 763-1107. BRYAN MCLELLAN/Daily LSA Junior Joanne Greenstein, co-chair of the UAC minicourses, sits behind her desk in the UAC offices on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union. -~ *pp JONES wayne tate a oints e Continued from Page 1 Students said they actor might be able to as- racinto his schedule. "He has such close cc b:alt ,n aad do it" c were hopeful that the multi-talented squeeze a CRISP recording session onnections to the University, he'd prob- n.fid LSCA -aou hmiiiui i ldoid AwCv. By Erica M. Smith Daily Staff Reporter n a lime when affirmative action is g criticized throughout the United States, Wayne State University has appointed its first African American President. In December 1996, Wayne State's former President David Adamany announced his retirement. Seven and a half months later, at an August public board meeting, Irvin Reid was named the university's ninth sident, making history by being the st black face among his eight prede- cessors. Reid, who leaves his post as president of Montclair State University in New Jersey, said his new presidency has an "added responsibility." "I look at it as an opportunity to demonstrate to all students the impor- tance of(diversity) in a University com- munity," Reid said. "I hope ... my race, tithe extent that it inspires others to succeed, will (play a positive role)." Wayne State Board of Governors Chair Denise Lewis said Reid's histori- cal hiring "received the unanimous sup- port of the board." "He's one of the leading African Americans in higher education because he's been in higher education for some 30 years," Lewis said. "We were proud to have a candidate of his stature apply for the position" The 18-member presidential search committee conducted its search accord- ing to the Open Meetings Act, which requires public universities to have open meetings. In 1996, during the University presidential search for Lee Bollinger, the University was forced to open some closed-door meetings after being sued for violating the act. Voting for Reid was a decision that Lewis said she based upon Reid's prior experiences at other universi- ties. "What impressed me most was his capacity to lead and to build," Lewis said. "He had a university under his charge for nine years. In addition to that, he's been Dean of the (University of Tennessee-Chattanooga) Business School and in both instances he built up the institutions where he served as leader." Reid, a graduate of Howard University and the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania, said he is "excited to meet the challenges" that await him on the Detroit campus. Wayne State Student Council President Michael Socha said that after meeting with Reid during the selection process, he is confident that the presi- dent "is big on student service." "He seems to be very well in tune to the fact that student service here at Wayne can be improved," said Socha, a Wayne State junior in the College of Liberal Arts. "I think he will put this place on the map." a jy come ana aoit, sai , sophomore Davi Pascoe. JEJ For CRISP Lady Task Force organizers say they have not discussed the issue of expense, but they do not intend to waste University money. Some students said they would be willing to dip into their wallets to bankroll the project. "I would pay a dollar to get his voice," LSA sophomore David Willens said. Though unable to provide exact figures, Assistant University Registrar Lynn Adelman said making a CRISP recording change would be "quite costly." The current CRISP voice was bought as a package with the computerized registration system, which was installed by technology company Periphonics in the winter of 1995. Severl University officials refused comment before see- ing the petition and hearing the students' reasons for making the change. To task force member and LSA senior Jenny House, the reason is simple: The current voice sounds very computer- ized and impersonal. "Talking to all different students on campus, you hear so many complaints about the CRISP lady," House said. "It seems that support for James Earl Jones as the voice is one thing that unites all students and it promotes good school spirit." Members said they hope to collect about 5,000 signatures before they take their proposal to Jones's representatives and the University administration. Michigan Student Assembly Vice President Olga Savic said the assembly is behind the project 100 percent. "I think it would be a great service to students because it would reduce student stress when registering," said Savic, who is also a task force member. Students can e-mail the task force at please.hold.on@umich.edu. FDA Continued from Page 1 because of new evidence that they dam- age heart valves, and the firm agreed. The U.S. decision prompted the French company, Servier, which sells fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine, to withdraw the drugs worldwide. The FDA had been struggling to determine the drugs' risk since it and the Mayo Clinic uncovered the first cases in July. Last week, the FDA ana- lyzed heart tests on 291 dieters and found almost a third - 92 people - had damaged heart valves, even though they had no symptoms. That's much higher than anticipated. Less than 1 percent of the general pop- ulation has such damage to their aortic or mitral valves, said Dr. Richard Bowen of Naples, Fla., who tested 200 of the patients. Most of the valves leaked blood, a condition that over time can enlarge the heart and seriously weaken it. Also, the FDA analyzed 25 patients who happened to have had their hearts tested before ever taking diet pills -and after taking the pills, about a third were newly diagnosed with valve damage. Those patients are in addition to 99 other fenfluramine or Redux users whose doctors have reported to FDA actual symptoms of heart damage, such as shortness of breath, chest pain or swollen ankles. Three of them died, and 17 underwent heart surgery, The newest findings show the drugs "present an unacceptable risk," said FDA Acting Commissioner Dr. Michael Friedman. Wyeth-Ayerst's Dr. Marc Deitch called the withdrawal "the most prudent course of action:' But he said there is still not definitive proof that the drugs are to blame, and said Wyeth-Ayerst will within a few weeks begin studying whether obese people are naturally more prone to valve disease. Meanwhile, dieters can return unused portions of the drugs for a refund. Dieters should see their doctors for close heart monitoring, Atkinson said. But not everyone will need an echocar- diogram, a sophisticated test that shows heart function and costs between $500 and $1,000, he cautioned. The FDA said no one knows whether patients' valve leakage will heal once they stop using the drugs. But Florida's Bowen said three of his severe patients did heal, and urged dieters not to rush into heart surgery. The FDA's first warnings in July caused diet prescriptions to plunge, and earlier this month, Florida banned pre- scriptions of the fen-phen combination, and lawsuits have been filed over the drugs. Still, Wyeth-Ayerst says two million Americans have taken Redux since it hit the market in June 1996, and four million have taken Pondimin since 1973, most in recent years. STUDENTS Shift/Friday Nights (Big Nightl) & Paid Lawyers Club Dining is hiring for fall tern weekends, Great Pay, Free Golf, 1/2 off sell, $7-8 to start. Catering opportunities. Meal meals & Banquet Gratuity. Ex. required & resea benefits. Apply in person or call 764-1115. Micros knowledge a plus. The Links at Whit- part- 551 S. State St. (corner of State and S. more Lake Golf Club, Sara @ (313) 449- University). 5451. 10 min. from UofM. *Choc TEMPORARY DELIVERY POSITION WANTED own AVAILABLE Drivers are needed to deliver Student to provide administrative support & work construction material on U of M campus. assist faculty who are learning to use free a Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. technology. Must be familiar with Web as mi Pay rate of $675 hour. Valid drivers authoring, MS Office, Mac OS & Win 95 as ese is required. Applicant must not have well as UM computing environment. 10-15 *Res lifting restrictions. Vehicle will be hours/week (flexible). Call 647-7406 for *Wea prtwided. Fill out application at: 326 E- more information, or stop by the Faculty a Hoover, U of M Plant Contracting Group Exploratory in Room 206 Graduate 1 d office located behind U of M Footbal (second floor) and pick up an application. Stadium. Phone 936-0264. . Ever THE BLUE FRON is hiig[ Be csual, WANTD MAT TEACHER parttm resear, THE LUE RON in irinl B casalafternoon & eve., Brightons, 810-229-4844. dependable and smait. Apply in person, 701 Mk Packard. Thanks. Make TYPIST PART-TIME, accurate, WORK-STUDY STUDENTS: Looking for dependable, people-oriented. Call Pat 994- a variety of work experiences? Flexible We a _ _ _ _ hours. Computer skills (word processing, ~Sdata entry) lus. Will train. Positions avail- WORK STUDY STUDENTS. able in erence planning, publications, Lawyers Club Dining is hiring for fall term. membership, and general office. Off-campus -$8 to start. Catering opportunities. Meal office. Own transpton necessary. Free efits. Apply in person or call 764-1115. Parking. Contact Heidi or Peg at: 996-7832 551 S. State St. (corner of State and S. to schedule an interview. University). WORK STUDY OFFICE assistants. Help to p/ ww u . process research grant proposals. Word- n p/ w w ub processing, flin, cyn; um ich.edu/daily/ad sCm m ane acexp rs. flex. d 2 C training, talk on the telephone, never get paid to do interviews for medical rch [and morel, flexible scheduling, time or full-time. ose 10 to 40 hours per week! *Set your schedule and stick to it! *Choose to evenings and/or weekends!*Consume offee, tea or hot chocolate even as late dnight ume builder! *Earn $6 - $9.50 per hour! ar whatever you want to work! *Fill out applicationI (You can be earning $$$ in ays or less.) y "yes" directs you toward a telephone rch or interview position with DataStat, No sales, evert your progressive step toward DataStat Come over and see us now. re in Ann Arbor at 3975 Research Park Drive, near Briarwood. CALL 994-4199. tEATIVE and energetic 3-yr.-old gir Pr sitter Wed. and Fri . fro .0- CHILD CARE FOR 3 young, very active kids. Mon. & Wed. 5:30-8PM & some wknd. hrs. NE A2, must have car. $8/hr. Call Cindy w/ refs. 663-0191. CHILD CARE - Eleven year old, Own transportation helpful but not required. Sporadic evenings and weekend hours. $6.50 to start. Tolerance for birds, cats and large dog a must. 741-4874. CHILD CARE: Begin Fall 10 hrs./wk., 3 days after school. 5 & 9 yr. old boys. Exp., refs., car necessary. 663-3482. CHILDCARE FOR INFANT TWINS in Saline home, Part-time, flex. hrs., reference required. 313-429-8444 EARLY CHILDHOOD substitutes needed. Work according to your availability with young children ina fun environment. CallPat at St. Paul's Early Childhood Center 668- 0887. LOVING RESPONSIBLE SITTER needed for 2 delightful kids ages 2 & 4. Intelligence, professionalism & ref. req. Need to enjoy playing & laughing. 747-8406. MOTHER'S HELPER- Flexible schedule. 10-15 hrs. per week. Must have car. Call 944- 1700. NANNY IN A2 Full or part time. Can work w/ school sched. Pleasant 4 mo. old. Com- fortable house. Friendly dog. Nice parents. Great pay. Must have trans. English speak please. 332-0192. NANNY NEEDED: Enthusiastic, loving, and experienced person to provide care in our home to two children ages 1 year and 1 month. Must be a non-smoker and be able to provide own transportation. Competitive salary. Hours Mon-Fri., 7:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. References required. Call eves. 313-426- 1950. PROFESSIONAL COUPLE seeking responsible student for child care, light cooking. 4pm-7pm M-F. Experience with in- fants and own transportation required. $8.50/ hr. 662-9491. SEEKING CARE for 7 yr. old on Old West Side. Own trans. a plus. 3:30-6:00. Refs. required. 668-1332. What you want... Baby we got it classified. SITTER NEEDED for two children 5 1/2 and 14 monts.Weekends and occasional weeknights. Good pay. 761-7291. SITTERS for 10 year old high func. boy w/ autism. Good pay. 426-8556. WED. MORNINGS and/or occasional eves. Start at $7/hr. Call Sally 975-9473. WEEKLY WOMEN'S GROUP seeks dependable, experienced child care. Own transportation please. Dana 741-8284. tickets & ravel DESPERATE FAN will do anything for Notre Dame Tix! Big$ Mike 810-979-9174. LOW FARES WORLDWIDE Instant pur- chase Eurail passes issued. Regency Travel 209 S. State 665-6122. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL Tickets available. Call Ted 615-662-3769. NEED 6 TICKETS for Northwestem Gamel Call Melissa ASAP at 248-661-1697. NEED NOTRE DAME TIX! 4 together or set of 2. Call Jon 769-9410. NEED ONE NOTRE DAME ticket. I will bring you great riches. 913-9387. NOTRE DAME TICKETS wanted. Call Jim 495-1015 ovenings or message. NOTRE DAME V. UM Football Tickets Wanted. Not in the student section. 1-800-901-8497. TALK 0' THE TOII~ms AN60ta Napil (nap-i-ly) ad. 1. refers to that of an unkindly disposition; ill-natured; The Beast. 2. still F !#ked up. ex. "Isn't it napily how the Diag is so schwag ? " * special fanks to eg and his Sfeffer self.. ..Please leave comments for Kancheo L at: luk@umich.edu --- call Tim 314-434-7279- ACCORDIANS. 4 different. Used. They're hip. 995-0528. THE BEST REPAIR SHOP FOR YOU. Endorsed by idols & most makers. Herb David Guitar Studio. 302 E. Liberty. 665- a oot. neea s hir rc. uur. mi ,.- 5:30. Well paid. 769-7245 Rita. 2 GREAT KIDS need aftersoon babysitter on Mon. & Thurs. Call 662-4805. A WONDERFUL BABYSITTER Needed. Part-time. Flexible hrs. Walking distance to campus. 747-9493 or 668-2467. ACTIVE FAMILY NEEDS help with kids & carpools. Flex. schedule, 15-20 hrs./wk. kids aged 7, 6, 4, & 2. Must have car & exp. Call Jane 663-4276. AFTER SCHOOL Childcare/tran rtation, light housekeeping needed. 996-055 ATERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 7 yr. old girl 3:30 - 6:00 pm, 2-3 aftermoons per wk. $7/hr call 769-5658. BABYSITTER NEEDED: delightful 3 &'5 yr. old boys, Bums park area. Mon am., Wed. a.m., every other Thur. 5:30-8, wknd. times. $7/hr. Car needed. Call 663-1455 if avail. any of these times. BABYSITTER NEEDED Tues. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Occasional eves. & wknds. Ref. req., close to campus. Call Kathy 668-2467. BABYSITTER NEEDED for 1-2 children, 15 mo. and 4 yr. old girls. Will work around your schedule. Must have own trans. Ex- perience pref. Call 429-8470. BABYSITTER NEEDED occasionally for pre-school boy. Own car, experience. Call Sally at 665-2309. CHILD CARE NEEDED Tues. & Thurs. 3- 5:30 pm. Experience . References required. Cl Cheryl 975-0434. viewing. u youca a n , iae- -, sr collect at (818) 362-93 er Noon Sun. or 11 p.m. otherdays. Alpha Kappa Psi The Professional Coed Business Fraternity Info. Rush Meeting Tuesday 5:30 B1279 Wednesay 5:30 B1270 Business Admin. Bldg. Free pizza& o INFORMATIONAL MEETING for those ROMANTIC GETAWAY- Cozy log cabins interested in becoming a U-M mens basket- on lake. $54-79 ntly. Incl. hot tub, canoes & ball manager. Thurs. Sept 186@ 7pm atCris- more. Traverse City. 616/276-9502. ler Arena. SPRING BREAK Reps wanted for Acapul- PARKING NEEDED on Central campus. co from $559. Quad Call Dan Regency Please call 769-0885. Travel 665-6122. SPRING BREAK '9 - Sell Trips, Ears Cash & Go Freelil STS is now hiring campus reps. Lowest rates to Jamaica, Mexico & Florida. Call 800-648-4849. SPRING BREAK! Free travel/highest commissions. Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas, Barbados, Florida, Padre & Morel Free parties, drinks & eats FRee info packet. LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION! unsplash Tours 1-800-426-7710. Roommates needed to share 5 bdrm. hse STUDENTS Purchase your tickets with Con- near Business School. 662-0070. tinental vouchers & Amex card. Regency Travel 209S. State St. 665-6122. U OF M - NOTRE DAME tickets needed. food & en t Call Chris at 332-4646 WANTED 2 TICKETS for Univ. of Mich./ Mich. State game. Call 810-229-4844. WANTED Notre Dame vs. U-M. General - - Admision tickets. 1-800-455-2916. WANTED: NOTRE DAME tickets. Call HIGH QUALITY Afford. band wanted for 761-8462. Halloween party. Call Julian 930-2745. 118 vY