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June 08, 1998 - Image 2

Resource type:
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Publication:
Michigan Daily Summer Weekly, 1998-06-08

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2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, June 8, 1998

TICKETS
Continued from Page 1
"Students are excited about Michigan
athletics " Goss said.
LSA sophomore John Roberts said
he will be happy as long as he can
watch the games in the stadium.
"After winning a national title,
everyone probably wants a ticket,"
Roberts said.
In addition to other changes, 238
ticket-holders will be relocated in sec-
tions 34-37 for handicap access..
"Close to 1,000 season-ticket hold-
ers will be relocated and be offered

comparable seating;'M Mlin said. "We
have the inventory and the space to do
it. Quite honestly, it's being well-
received by some folks."
Molin added that regardless of how
many students receive tickets, there
will always be a demand for more.
"It's still going to be the hottest tick-
et in town," Molin said. "There won't
be any empty seats"
Molin compared his job of finding
seats in Michigan's stadium to "the guy
at Purdue who is trying to figure out
how to fill the stadium."
"I would take our problem anytime
over his," Molin said.

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WHEELS
Continued from Page 1
universities in Florida and Albany, N.Y.,"' usk said.
Lusk said the class gives students the opportunity to write
about their ideas and send them to journals or magazines of
their choice.
In addition to the readings, lectures and papers, the class
incorporates hands-on instruction in "places no student
thinks they can get into."
"We've been to the Clements Library and the North
Campus Bell Tower," said John Quail a School of Natural
Resources and Environment senior.
Lusk said she varies the meeting places of the class in
order to give students an appreciation for different places.
"Moving around instead of sitting in a classroom allows
students to understand different moods as they move through
space;" Lusk said.
Last week, the class met at the University's Medical
Center, where they picked up four wheelchairs and headedto
Central Campus. The students said they took turns maneu-
vering the chairs on their own in an effort to appreciate the
need for wheelchair-accessible bicycle paths.
Perched in a wheel chair on the steps of Rackham auditorium,
Quail said the trip from the Medical Center was an eye-opener.
"It's much harder to use a wheelchair than I thought' Quail
said.
PONLS
RELIG OU ontinued from Pag
Behind the scene
the safety of AnnlA
Mike Magiera,a
Pool, said the life
ventive lifeguard
KOREAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR simmers safety i
3301 Creek Dr. 971-9777 1 have always w
SUNDAY: 9:30 a.m. English Magiera said. "A 1
11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Korean come here. We cate
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Matt Johnson, al
Worship at 10:15am guard anda st
College Bible Study at 9:00am Michigan, said last
2580 Packard Road slow because of th
Ann A or "The weather ha
until last week, Jo
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL LCMS Johnson, who h
1511 Washtenaw, near Hil seven years, said he
SUMMER SUNDAYS, 10:30 A.M. tion.
WED. SUPPER, 6:00 .M. "Saving pedestri
Pastor Ed Krauss, 663-5a0

1 Lusk said she used Monday's sheelchair instruction to show
her students that a bicycle path, though often considered a multi-
purpose trail, is not always easily accessible in wheelchairs.
"Ihe handrails are really handy, joked Lisa Revitte, an
LSA senior, as she made her way down the guide rail-lined
handicapped ramp of Rackham.
Revitte said the day's lesson provided an in-depth look at
the sometimes inefficient construction of roads or sidewalks
that are considered bicycle and wheelchair accessible.
"The hills near Central Campus were horrible," Revitte
said. "We had to have people push us up."
Yaerl Waldman, a second-year graduate student in the
College of Urban Planning, said understanding wheelchair
needs is important since users must share bicycle paths with
cyclists and pedestrians.
"Now I realize you have to pay attention to the little
things" in order to design a good path, Waldman said.
Waldman added that efficient bicycle and wheelchair path-
ways should be more decorative.
"The walls and corridors of the hospital were so bare,"
Waldman said. "If I designed them, I would make them pret-
tier to look at for people riding along."
The students were all smiles as the struggled to maneuver
their chairs across campus.
"If you're going to construct a path, you have to make it
wheelchair accessible, now we know how to do that," Quai4
said.
like baseball," Johnson said.
Michelle Moshier, head lifeguard at
ge 1 Fuller Pool, said this is her fourth year
es, lifeguards ensure guarding the pool.
krbor residents. "I make sure every area is guarded,"
a lifeguard at Fuller Moshier said. "On hot days there are a
guards practice pre- lot of people:"
ing to make sure Adam Wheeler, a lifeguard a
s secure. Veterans Park, said a lot of famili
vanted to work here," swim at the center.
ot of college people "Customer service is our absolute
er to everybody." number one priority," Wheeler said.
so a Fuller Pool life- But, he said, it doesn't pay to be open
tudent at Eastern in rainy weather. If the temperature is 65
week was unusually degrees or less, Veterans Pool will close.
e weather. "We haven't opened in the last cou-
s been pretty nice up ple of days, Wheeler said.
hnson said. LSA senior Jessica Mike said this is
as been guarding for her first year as a lifeguard at Fuller
has enjoyed the posi- Pool.
"Even when it's really cold we st
ians is a pastime - open," Mike said.

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Earn $10 for a one session computer-controlled dynamic decision mak-
ing experiment. You will work an hour or less. Contact Bud Gibson by
email only.
ddm@whalesong.crew.umich.edu
The experiment is being held in the Business School. You will receive
$6.25 base pay and a $3.75 bonus for completing the experiment. The
experiment sessions are:
1. Tuesday, June 9 through Thursday, June 11.
2. Tuesday, June 16 through Thursday, June 18.
Available times are 4:45 PM, 6:15 PM, or 7:30 PM on the days list-
ed. Indicate your availability in the email and phone number
where you can be reached on short notice.
No further information is available about the experiment until such time
as you are chosen to participate.

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