Monday, June 7, 1999 - The Michigan Daily - 7 U' Sailing Club provides public access to local boating By D@Ut etminues northwest of Ann Arbor. ber," Boslev said. "We have people Bosley said the University does not against other teams from the Midwe Daily dRei f -.4 . st. While the accelerated pace of spring term classes can sometime feel over- whelming, a group of students and fac- ulty have found a way to dissolve those stresses by taking to the water. The University of Michigan Sailing Cqub attracts boaters to its home ers of Baseline Lake, about 20 in a tnon to orfering access to anl types of watercraft, the UMSC aims to teach sailing skills. Although the club currently has 113 members, Commodore Kevin Bosley, president of the UMSC, said he expects that number to rise to about 220 members by the end of the season. "Anyone is welcome to be a mem- tram all walks of lite here, including students, faculty, and alumni from U of M, Eastern Michigan University and even Concordia (College)." The UMSC has property rights on Baseline Lake, a wide spat of the Huron River which was donated to the UMSC by the University's zoology department in the 1950s. give runding to the UMSC, but the group has built a clubhouse, along with a storehouse, and maintains and updates their equipment using mem- bership dues. Shoreside lectures and individual sailing lessons involving the club's 24 sailboats and seven sailboards are offered every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Although the first two lessons are free, membership can be attained wnhen dues are paid on the third visit. n'iversity alumna Tamear Charney, a broadcast producer at WUOM radio. has heen a member of the club since 1997 and came to the lake Saturday with her family for a picnic and an afternoon of sailing. "I love it out here. I don't think enough students know about this," Charney said. UMSC also has an intercollegiate racing team for undergraduates during the fall which competes mainly In the fall, the club holds picnics fr students and occasionally brngs sail- boats onto the Diag to generate student interest. Business graduate student Sibel Koyluoglu, a club member since 1986, said she learned how to sail from UMSC and wonders why more stu- dents don't sail. "With so mann lakes around, how could you not sail'?" she asked. To become a member or to just check out the club, Bosley suggests coming to one of the club's weekly Thursday meeting, held at 7:45 p.m. in Room 120 of the Dennison Building, or simply showing up at Baseline Lake. Twenty-five to 35 lessons are tau ht each Saturday and Sunday, Bosley said. "But there's always room for more." For directions to Baseline Lake or for more information, contact the club at 426-0920. CLERICAL, PART TIME, 15-20 hrs per week. Cash handling, basic bookkeeping. 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Please SPECIAL GIFT - Werelooking for healhy- women between the ages 21-35 for egg donation All ethnic backgrounds are ANTED. 3une throuh e nouraged. Fe paid. Setd inquiricsto1 S-23 area. S%.00/r. M AARMA. P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor. M . Call 734-4'29-2858. 4106. SHOOTING Continued from Page 1 Neither Seitz or Elkhoja are affil- iated with the University, but Logghe said Seitz had been a stu- dent at Ferris State University in Big Rapids, Mich. Seitz, a 1997 Lahser High School graduate, was attending a party in the area with friends. Logghe said a fight which later involved Seitz may have started over a "catcall" made to a female walking with Seitz's friend, Although Seitz was not present at that time, the fight resumed later involving him, his friends, and the suspect. "The situation simply deteriorated from there," Logghe said. The suspect fired a single shot into the air, and Logghe said Seitz imme- diately confronted him, and was shot in a matter of seconds. The Department of Public Safety was called in to assist in controlling the crowd surrounding the scene. Although Logghe said it is not known if drugs or alcohol played a factor in the fight or the shooting, there were multiple parties in the area and AAPD officers were seen confiscating a keg from Debs. Those at the party said many of the people in attendance were not affili- ated with the Debs co-op or neigh- boring homes and apartments. Ann Arbor resident Andrea Burns. who recently moved out of Debs, said she was at the co-op's party, but left, before the shooting occurred. 'People were dancing in the living room," Burns said. "Everything was pretty normal." Those who knewt Seitz said it swould be out of chartcter for him tox eonfvont someone with a weapon. "I am very surprised, he was very quiet," said Michigan State student and Lasher grad Betsy Caskey, a friend of the Seitz family. Caskey said Seitz, who transferred to Lahser from Birmingham Brother Rice High School, normally kept to himself and had a small group of friends. The preliminary hearing for Elkhoja's trial is scheduled to be held June 16, but could change if Levitt needs more time to prepare his client's defense. RABYSITTER N needs help beforez call(734)528-2895. BABYSITTER W Aug. Mich. 1Ve./U F, approx 9amn-4t r