• Tidak ada hasil yang ditemukan

Plan draft includes criticisms Of IUPUI condition

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2023

Membagikan "Plan draft includes criticisms Of IUPUI condition"

Copied!
16
0
0

Teks penuh

(1)

THE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY-PURDUE UNIVERSITY AT

Plan draft includes

By SHERRY SLATER Senior Staff Writer

The firet draft of IUPUr* De­

velopment Plan for 1987-2000 indudee highly critical obeerva- tione and constructive plane concerning the current state of the university and its proposed direction into the next century.

Theee basic programs at IUPUI (with recent large enroll­

ments) are characterized by the excessive use of part-time facul­

ty, grossly inadequate library facilities, and limited student services,” according to the docu­

ment.

One gauge for the in­

sufficiencies, according to the plan, is the figures for the 1985- 86 Student Fees and State Ap­

propriation Per Full-Time Equi­

valent Student which are

"dramatically lower than other public universities in Indiana.”

The numbers show IUPUI receiving from 1450 to $3,050 leee per student than Indiana State University, Ball State University, Purdue University regional campuses and Indiana University regional campuses (eee Table I). Like IU- Bloomington, IUPUI is consider­

ed a 'core campus’ within the I.U. system, unlike I.U.’s other campuses, such as IU-Kokomo and lUPU-Fort Wayne.

Additional state fond* neces­

sary to fiilfill the extensive de­

velopment plan would not ex­

ceed the current financial allot­

ments to Ball State University or Indiana University, according to the document.

criticism s

1985-86 Student Fees and State Appropriation Per Full-Time Equivalent

Student

Indiana Stats University $7,000- Bafl Stats University $6,200 Purdue University

regional campuses Indiana University

$4,400 regional campuses $4,400

IUPUI $3,950

’Support per student The document, originally writ­

ten by Dean of Faculties Wil­

liam Plater, is a result of two years of extensive faculty re­

search. It also reflects the prob-

Rhood a Laurent (photo above) helps Shannon Frye prepare her tiger costume for last Friday night's Halloween party at the Herron School of Art. The freshman fine arts majors were two of the many IUPUI students taking part in the annual costume affair. Tom Henry and Kim Shafer (above right) are shown taking a break during last Thursday night's party at the Union Building.

Photos by Keeip Smith

Of IUPUI condition

Isms and opportunities each school’s faculty recently sub­

mitted to Inch ana University President Thomas Ehrlich.

"We will have a second draft,"

Plater said. "It’s a paper designed to elicit discussion *.

"Please regard this statement as a draft and read it with the intention sf offering your thoughts and comments,” Vice President Gerald L. Bepko said in an introductory letter that ac­

companied copies of the plan sent to various faculty and stu­

dent representatives.

Although the letter is ad­

dressed to Bepko’s "colleagues,"

the Student Senate is preparing a formal reaction that addresses the document section by section.

"If any students want to look at the developmental plan, it’s in our office. Student Senate Vice President Linda Proffitt said. "Well take their com­

ments. Some people don’t know we Ye their voice on campus.”

According to “IUPUI: Its Mis­

sion, Role and Future Develop­

ment,” a report submitted to the

Indiana Commission for Higher Education in December 1985, 50 percent of freshman and sophomore oouraee, 38 percent of junior and senior courses and 21 percent of graduate courses are taught by part-time faculty.

Total credit hours taught by part-time faculty amount to 45 percent or 56,973 of 123,324 credit hours.

"Three-fourths of most busi­

ness subject areas and about half of the entire liberal arts and science programs are taught by part-time faculty," according to the document "A similar reliance on part-time faculty in most of the undergraduate profeeaional programs impinges on their integrity and quality as well."

Replacing the mostly com­

petent part-time faculty would coot over $30 million and re­

quire at least one new building for offices, according to the plan.

The proposal lists increasing fiill-time faculty and using more eelective hiring processes for See LIBRARY. Page 14

I.U. Foundation stock investments decline

By AMY-JEANNE ADE Staff W riter

Stanford University’s $1.5 bil­

lion endowment fond provides 12 percent of its operating fond.

Because of a recent $200 mil­

lion dollar loss on the stock market, Stanford is now faced with either cutting its budget or raising tuition.

The Indiana University Foun­

dation also invests in the stock market - about $95 million, over half of its $165 million endowment fund.

However, unlike Stanford, I.U.

receives no operating capital from its endowment fund, said James Elliott, vice-president of finance for the I.U. Foundation.

Foundation income is used to provide student aid and scholar­

ships, endow professorships, and purchase library materials and real estate.

"Basically, we try to watch what’s going on,” said Elliott, adding, "we didn't expect it (the stock market) to go down as much as it did.”

He said that the stock market when dosing O ct 19 matched the Dow Jones average for De­

cember 1986.

The value of the foundation's stocks has currently decreased approximately nine to 10 per­

cent, Elliott said.

t

m asically we try

m J to watch what's going on...we didn't expect it (the stock market) to go down as much as it did”

-James Elliot Vice President of finance for the I.U. Foundation

But because tl a I.U. Founda­

tion relies on stock dividends ~ payments made by corporations to shareholders - rather than profits from buying and selling, the long-term effect of stock market losses is unclear.

While the cost of stocks has dropped, the dividends com­

panies pay to their shareholders nave not.

"We’re long-term investors,”

said Elliot.

The foundation also invests in the bond market and real estate.

The bond market has strei^th- ened since October 19th as in­

vestors place their money in

secure investments, such as

treasury bonds. The value of

real estate investments remains

unchanged, said Elliott.

(2)

Page 2/ The S-A»G«A«M»0-R»E / Nov. 2, 1987

CaH us at 274-3455

Cable television com es to Ball Residence:

a 'nice a m en ity/ says housing director

Initial wiring began last week for the installa­

tion of cable television into Ball Residence, Warthin Apartments and the Graduate _ Townhouses.

Work should be complete by the time students return from Thanksgiving vacation, said campus housing director David Paul.

Basic cable eervice o f 40 channels will be free to residents. Residents who want to subscribe to Home Box Office (HBO) will have to pay “ an ad­

ditional charge between five and six dollars,’’

'Paul said.

The wall outlets, or “drops* as they are called, will be installed later this month and will be designed for cable-ready TV sets. The Campus Housing Department will offer, at no charge, a

changeover box to those residents whose sets are not cable-ready.

Because the installation of the drops will re­

quire workmen to enter residence rooms, resi­

dents will be notified in advance about the work-echedule.

Although Paul said that there will likely be a rent increase for the 1988-39 academic year he also said that he “wouldn’t want the cable TV to cause an extra need for rent*

“Historically, there's always been a rent in crease,* said Paul. Annual rent increases over the last five years have averaged around 4 to 5 percent, Paul said.

“We think (cable TV) is a nice amenity at no extra charge,* Paul said.

Bloodmobile gathers donations fo r area hospitals

Although it may seem appropriate, the blood- mobile parked on campus this Tuesday won’t be here for a belated Halloween celebration.

It’s coming instead as part o f the Central Indi­

ana Regional Blood Center’s annual blood drive.

The center, which provides more than 600 units of blood per day to 42 hospitals in central Indiana, wants to attract 100 donors to the bloodmobile between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Tuesday.

The bloodmobile will be parked under the walk­

way between the Busineea and SPEA buildings.

Appointments are not needed, but students, faculty and staff who want to donate blood will need to register inside Entrance 3 o f the SPEA Building before rolling up their sleeves.

“Statistics show that only five percent o f thoee who could give blood actually do it,* said Jean

> Deeds, director of public relations for the center.

"We'd kind of like to U p into that other 95 per­

cent."

Deeds said that the need for whole blood has increased in recent years because area hospitals

have started performing operations, such as organ transplants, that require additional sup­

plies of blood.

“We don’t have as many more donors as we have requests,” said Deeds.

Fear o f contracting AIDS has also been a fac­

tor in the available supply o f blood, but Deeds discounted iU effect on current donation levels saying that moat people understand now that

“there is absolutely no way you can get AIDS from donating blood*

The AIDS virus is transferred from one person to another through intimate contact and the ex­

change of body fluids. Needles used for collect' ing blood are sterilized and sealed in sterilized foil bags. The needles, covered also by a steril­

ized rubber cap, are used only once and than discarded.

Glenda Sebastian, public relations director for the Indiana Health Student Association sponsoring Tuesday’s event, said that a similar event on campus last year resulted in 60 donors giving a pint each.

Career d a y concentrates on engineering stu den ts

Engineering studenU will be the center o f at­

tention for some 100 companies sending repre­

sentatives to a career day on campus Thursday.

The program is designed to acquaint studenU in the Purdue School of Engineering and Tech- nology, which has the highest‘enrollment of any undergraduate program on campus, with pros­

pective employers.

StudenU can meet informally with the repre­

sentatives in the first and second floor lobbies d the Engineering and Technology Building lo cated on the main campus.

In the afternoon, special presentations will take place in Room 1202 o f the E/T Building

“College to Corporate Transition* will be dis cuseed from 1:30 to 2:16 p.m.; “Interviewing Skills* from 2:30 to 3:16 p.m., and ‘ Resume Preparation” from 3:30 to 4:15 p.m.

When you say ________

Birth C o n tro l--- You mean ____________

P lanned P aren th o o d

Planned Parenthood sets the standard for professional, con­

fidential, low-cost:

• All birth control m ethods

• Breast exam s and pap smears

• Pregnancy testing w h ile you wait

• G ynecological and V.D . exam s

• Personal crisis counseling

Education, Counseling and Resource Center: 925-6686

Medicaid and charge cards welcome.

10 Convenient Locations

Midtown Northwest

925-6747 876-1774

Castleton Franklin

849-9304 736-4511

Southside W estfield

788-0396 896-2594

Eastside Martinsville

899-4731 342-0126

Avon Shelbyville

272-2042 398-0717

NOTICES

NOTICES d e a d lin e is Thursday a t Noon

5

T O D A Y _

T h e D epartm en t o f G eology’s colloqu iu m th is w eek is by Dr. G reg M cD on a ld o f the C in cin n ati M useum o f N atural H istory. He w ill speak on “ Ice-age M am m als in the Indiana-O hio A rea” from 4-5 p.m . in C a vanuagh Hall Room 435.

• • *

T h e Internation al S ociety C lu b w ill con du ct a m eetin g at 5:30 p.m . in L ibrary R oom 131. N ew m em bers are e n ­ couraged to attend. For d etails, call M aria n a R ichm ond at 274-7294.

• • •

“ A ID S: T h e C om m u n ity and the E nvironm ent* w ill b e the topic o f a speech b y Dr. M orris French at 7 p.m . in Room 4008 o f the B u sin ess/S P E A B u ilding. For details, call the S P E A O ffice at 274-4656. T h e even t is sponsored by th e Indiana H ealth S tu den ts A ssociation .

» *

T h e U n iv ersity F oru m /D eba te T ea m w ill d ebate the resolution th at U.S. cov ert in v olv em en t in C en tral A m er­

ica is u ndesirable. T h e d eba te w ill b egin a t 2:30 p.m. in Room 2002 o f the B u sin ess/S P E A Building.

T U E S D A Y __________________________________________________

The G erm an D epartm en t presen ts Prof. P eter Por, Professor o f C om p a ra tive L iteratu re at the U n iv ersity o f N ancy, F ran ce, in a lecture en titled “ Die W ien er Szen e in der J a h rh u n d ertw en d e (V ien n a at th e T u rn o f the C entury: T h e C u ltu ral S cen e)” at 8 p.m . in C avanaugh Hall Room 507. F or m ore inform ation , call Prof. G iles Hoyt at 274-2330.

• • •

T h e A d u lt E d ucation C o-ord in a tin g C en ter w ill sponsor a sem in ar on “T im e an d S tress M an a gem en t” from 10:30 a.m .-noon and W ed n esd a y from 4:30-6:3 0 p.m. in C a vanaugh H all R oom 0 0 1 E. F or details, call Sh erry Dar- rah at 274-2066.

• • ♦ -4MA

T h e B loodm obile from the C en tral In diana R egional Blood C en ter w ill be p ark ed ou tside the B u sin ess/S P E A B u ilding w ith open ap p oin tm en ts available. T h e S P E A O f­

fice, 274 -46 56, can provide m ore in form ation on the In d i­

ana H ealth S tu d en ts A ssocia tion ’s b lood drive.

W E D N E S D A Y ______________________________________ ____ —

“T op ological E lectron D en sity A n a ly sis” , this w eek’s chem istry sem in ar, w ill be offered by Steven B ach rach of N orthern Illinois U n iv ersity. T h e C h em istry D epartm en t sponsors a sem in ar each W edn esda y at 4 :3 0 p.m. in the K rannert B u ildin g R oom 231 on the 38th S treet cam pus.

•* •

T h e E questrian C lu b w ill m eet a t 8:30 p.m . in Room 1128 o f the E d ucation/S ocial W ork B u ilding. C all Lisa K. D orn at 861-5877 for details.

• • •

T h e D isabled S tu d en ts O rga n iza tion w ill sponsor an open foru m and m em bersh ip drive w ith Pat G riest o f D is­

abled S tu d en t S ervices at 1 p.m . in the third floor com ­ m ons o f the E d u cation /S ocial W ork Building. Call M ar- chell H unt a t 6 34 -75 08 for m ore inform ation.

• • •

A free sh ow in g o f the m ovie “ H e ll» A g a in ” , sponsored by the R esiden ce H all A ssociation , w ill begin at 7:30 p.m . at Lafayette S qu are M all. O ver 100 tickets are available on a first-com e, first-served basis. F or tick ets o r d etails, call A n ita G ra dy at 274-7458.

• • •

T h e P rogressive S tu d en t U n ion w ill vote on issu es in ­ clu din g apa rth eid, A m n esty In tern ation al, an d the PE A C E and F R E E ZE m ovem en ts. T h e m eetin g will b egin at 7 p.m in Library R oom 318. C all H yun Bow den at 844 -14 77 fc details.

• * *

T h e U n iv ersity W ritin g C en ter w ill offer a w ork shop on

“W ritin g H on estly" from 3-4 p.m . in C a vanuagh H all Room 427. Learn strategies for sa y in g exactly w h at you m ean, honestly an d clearly. S tu den ts should take exam ple o f w ritin g-in-progress to the w ork sh op, i f possible.

See NOTICES, Page 9

(3)

A 1 0 W S k M N0v. 2.1987 ” ^ Page 3 |

Committees still seek students

B y S T A N L E Y D . M IL L E R A s s t. N e w * E d it o r Campua committee* play an important role in university policy-making, and committees from the Affirmative Action Ad­

visory Council to the Parking Appeal* Committee seek stu­

dent member* to participate in that process.

At least eight campus com­

mittees still need student repre­

sentatives, according to Student Senate President Richard Schill­

ing.

The Senate has posted fliers announcing the vacancies in various locations around the campus, and Schilling said that response has been good.

The Senate received four in­

quiries within a week o f posting the fliers, he said. At least 13 more students are needed.

The committees that need rep­

resentatives are:

* Affirmative Action Advisory Council (one student)

• Calendar Committee (one to two students)

• Faculty Council Student Af­

fairs Committee (two graduate students, one un­

dergraduate student)

• Committee on the Disabled (one student member, one representative to the Student Sennte)

* Parking Appeals Committee (one student)

* Student Financial Aid Com­

mittee (two students)

• Student-StofT Health Ser­

vices Committee (one stu­

dent)

* Academic Policies and Pro­

cedures Committee (one stu­

dent)

In addition, the Student Senate has two vacancies for senntors-nt-large. One o f those spots wns not filled in last fall’s elections; the other is the post vacated by Linda Proffitt when she wns nnmed vice-president.

Four other positions on the Senate have recently been filled.

Laura Hooton, a senior, is the new senator from the Herron School of Art; Nora Messer is

the appointee from the School o f Journalism; Leslie Weidenhnm- mer, a senior, is the new senator from the School of Physical Edu­

cation; and the representative from the School o f Social Work is graduate student Debra

Smith.

To apply for any of the posi­

tions available with the Senate or with the campus committees, inquire in the Student Assembly Office, Library Room 006A, at the west end o f the Hideaway.

Metro 100 trying again to increase school spirit

By LANCE U TTERBACK S t a f f W r it e r

Spirit has returned to the Metro 100 club. Stephanie Sten- nette, a Metro cheerleader, has revitalized the once-dead organi­

zation to help answer the com­

plaints of student* about a lack of campus life.

Stennette said the club’s pur­

pose is to “promote school spirit and get students more involved with (school) athletic activities.*

Linda Proffitt, vice-president o f the Student Senate, said the Senate wants to instill spirit

and support back into inter­

collegiate athletics.

The effort to increase spirit also answers the request o f Robert Lovell, head coach o f the men's bakstball team, to in­

crease student attendance at fu­

ture games.

The first event is planned for Nov. 18 at ths opening men’s basketball game. Proffitt is working with as many organiza­

tions as possible to try to make this opening a big success, though nothing has been final­

ized yet.

S K iT

Y ou r e d u c a tio n w ill n ot end w ith g ra d u a tio n As a g ra d ­ uate n urse at R ochester M e th o d ist H o spita l, you w ill re c e iv e d co m p reh e nsive tw e lve-w e ek lo n g o rie n ta tio n w here yo u w ill fu rth e r deve lo p y o u r p ro fe ssio n a l skills B eyo n d o rie n ta tio n , yo u w ill have th e ch allen g es and the g ro w th o p p o rtu n itie s th a t a w o rld -c la s s m e d ical ce nte r can p ro vide

D e cem be r gra ds a p p ly now to r p o s itio n s a vailab le in e arly 1988 S ta rtin g sa lary $24,627 A ttra c tiv e b en efit package

R o che ster M e th o d is t H o sp ita l is an 800-bed M ayo F o u n d a tio n H o sp ita l C h o o se ch a lle n g e C h oo se g ro w th C h oo se R o che ster M e th o d ist H o sp ita l R o che ster M e th o d is t H o sp ita l P erson ne l Services.

N u rsin g R e cru itm e n t S ectio n . 201 West C e nte r S treet.

Rochester. M N 55902, (507) 286-7091 (C o lle c t) Rochester M ethodist Hospital A MAYO FOUNDATION HOSTtTAl

A n C q u *l O p p o rtu n ity E m ployer

THERE A R E TW O SIDES T O BECOM ING A NURSE IN TH E ARM Y.

, And they’re both repre- I sented by the insignia you wear as a member o f the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you’re part o f a health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule, __________________ J not the exception. The gold bar I

on the right means you command respect as an Army officer If you’re earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7/13.

Clifton, NJ 07015. O r call toll free 1-800-U SA-ARM Y

A RM Y NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.

S TU D E N T D IS C O U N TS

C]&C€DARS

* • * "Three blocks west of Lafayette Road

* Studios, 1 and 2 bedroom Apartments

*

Prices start at $240

* Close to IUPUI Campus and Lafayette Square Mall

* Laundry facilities in each building

Open Mon.-Fri. 9.■00-5.00 Sat Sun. 12.00-4.-00

Phone. 293-0122 3503 N. Rybolt Apt. A

Get Cracking!

On Your

Way to a Possible Career!

I Professional internship with s Fortune 5 0 0 com pany

» Great for your resume l 1 5 -2 0 hours per week

► Potential of $ 9 an hour plus!!

I Valuable business experience

» O ffice facilities I Secretarial assistance

► Excellent training program

* Full tune consideration after you finish college

Contact: William S. Koch One North Capitol 8th Floor

Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 (317) 634-3534

B e & E r "

The Quiet Company *

A tough act to follow

(4)

Am k n 1 i 1 1 ii A . M

* 1 )* I Z j \ 1

z: |-riC # * l\|

H

- - j P a g e 4

2 l■ 1 1

Nov. 2 , 1 9 8 7

International stu d en ts need social life

T o th e E d itor:

According to the International Office, there are 225-250 foreign

■tudenta on student visas en­

rolled at IUPUI, but they are not the only foreign studenta at­

tending IUPUI. There are many other foreign studenta who are here on a permanent basis whose names do not appear on the International Office’s list.

In total, I would estimate that there are approximately 1,000 international students attending IUPUI each year.

The facilities available to in­

ternational students are not enough to accomodate this many students. The authorities of IUPUI should be more consider­

ate to the needs o f foreign stu­

dents, helping them to form a foreign student council to organize, plan activities, etc.

Li has been studying here at IUPUI for two years. Most o f his time is spent either in the li­

brary or in his room at the dormitory. Even during the summer when he is not taking any classes, he studies for sub­

jects that he will be taking later.

Not that he likes to study all the time, he has known nothing else since being here. He doesn’t know o f any places to go, and no one invites him to any parties either. With the help of a foreign council, people like Li can ex- , 'pand the areas o f their lives to include more o f a social life, as the council would offer them

]f

n L etters to ^ C the ]E d ito r )

that opportunity.

A foreign student council would help all foreign studenta, and should be primarily aimed at such things as planning ac­

tivities and outings for foreign students. Many foreign students are unsure o f their speaking abilities and are uncomfortable at the usual activities. Activities would attract students because they know that there would be studenta from their country and from other countries in at­

tendance.

The activities could be varied and range from dances and pic­

nics to sports and games o f dif­

ferent types. Having these ac­

tivities would help foreign stu­

denta more readily get together to share ideas and learn about cultural differences.

Not only can foreign students learn about each other, but Americans would be free to come and learn about other cultures.

It seems they are not knowl­

edgeable about other cultures.

The council could also set up a tutorial service in which both groups (American and foreign) could benefit. Many foreigners excel in science and mathe­

matics. Those students could help Americans in those areas, and they could in return help foreign students improve their English and other studies they may be having trouble with.

One might argue that there is already an organization for In­

ternational studenta. This is true, but it is very inactive. For example, last year the only ac­

tivity it provided was a Hal­

loween costume party. We need a new council, because one ac­

tivity out o f the year is insuffi­

cient.

Moat foreign students do not even know about the existing committee because it is such an inactive organization.

Many students feel lonely and alienated, as many o f them have just left behind everything they have ever known; their families, their culture, and their whole way o f life.

When one looks at many for­

eign studenU, there is sadness reflected in their eyes. Imagine how it feels to be alone in a strange country where one knows hardly anybody.

As stated, there are 1,000 for­

eign studenU on this campus, and all they need is an Interna­

tional Council to plan special programs to bring them all to­

gether to socialize and put a break in their monotonous way o f life.

S u s a n S o h r a b IUPUI

The Sagamore invites readers to respond to questions that will be, fea­

tured occasionally on the Opinion pages.

The column will be titled “Opposing Views.* We will submit a question con­

cerning a “hot" issue. Your response, pro or con, could be selected to represent that viewpoint.

ViewpoinU should be no longer than two and a half, neatly typed, double spaced pages. Entries must be in on the Wednesday after the question appears in the Sagamore.

StudenU, faculty, and staff are en­

couraged to reply. MaUrial may be ediUd for brevity and libel.

Send to:

Opposing Views c/o the Sagamore Room O OIG 425 N. Agnes Indianapolis, In. 46202

O PPO SIN G VIEW QUESTIO N: D o y o u feel w o rk in g an d g o in g to s ch o o l is a p o sitiv e o r n e g a tiv e situ a tion ?

Professors' faulty English leaves students guessing

S

ince English is how Americans communicate, one would expect that in order to teach here. In­

structors must be able to 6peak the language as well as being able to read It.

Yet at many colleges and universities, IU P U I In­

cluded. there Is often a problem with Instructors whose com mand of English leaves much to be desired.

Nothing Is more frustrating for students than to have an instructor present a heavily accented lecture using broken English. Students can be left guessing about everything from homework assignments to in-dass questions.

Nearly 100 percent of university teaching is admini­

stered orally. Instructors who can t be understood by students cheat their students by not fully imparting their knowledge.

Purdue University is offering remedial programs In communication skills for graduate assistants who d em ­ onstrate an inability to com mand the language of Eng­

lish.

Graduate assistants aren't assigned teaching du­

ties until they can pass a proficiency examination; the 6am e should hold true for full professors.

And if foreign students are expected to comply with a certain level of English speaking proficiency, so too must instructors.

This is not a new phenom enon at large universities In this oountry. Finally, steps are being taken to correct this academ ic malady.

T h e I.U . Board of Trustees is currently developing plans to incorporate proficiency and evaluation stan­

dards for foreign instructors.

Until then, students will opt for different classes in future sem esters to avoid those “dreaded professors,”

or they will frantically go about the drop/add process in order to find an Instructor that they can understand.

- The Editorial Board

( C am pus Inquiry ~) Who are the Indianapolis mayoral

FR A N K BR E Y Government documents R e f . l ib r a r i a n

*1 know Mr. Senden and Mr.

♦ Moldthan along with Mayor Hu- dnut.’

D OU G O D E L L Route driver

M o d e r n V e n d in g

*1 know Mayor Hudnut is. Ill tell you the truth, I haven't watched the new* for over aeven weeks.*

A M Y K IN G Dental hygiene F r e s h m a n

“Bill Hudnut and... I have no idea who the other one is.”

V IR G IN IA H O L ZE R Secretary

G e o g r a p h y d e p t .

“Hudnut and...I don’t remember his name( Democratic candidate ).

I know more about him than his name, secretaries don't have time to read the paper.’

SU SA N SU TT O N Anthropology dept.

C h a ir p e r s o n

“Obviously we know who Hudnut is. And some democrat. 111 proba­

bly vote for.’

(5)

Nov. 2, 1987 / TF» S-A-C-A-M-O-R-E / P ^ e 5

Voting rights: use them or lose them

You don't know what you've got until 1 it’a gone, or ao the eaying goes - a t least about the right to vote.

TTie right to have a say in government elections, through whatever means, is a bone o f contention with almost every other country on the face o f this planet.

But it’s sometimes taken for granted here. People have been imprisoned and killed in some countries for demanding that right.

Americans boast to the rest of the world about the freedoms they have, yet voter turnout on a national and state level drops with each election. Is it lack o f concern or lack o f choice that keeps people at home?

I believe it's lack o f concern.

People think that no matter how bad it gets, life as we know it will remain the same. The postman will still pick up and deliver mail, the newspaper will still get delivered, and television will continue to be aired.

What more does anybody need?

Voting seems to have become more a symbol o f freedom than a process to choose the best candidate.

Maybe instead o f having elections we can use consensus polls to choose. More people would be polled than the number that turn out for elections.

Consider these excuses: “ My vote won't make a difference," “It’s already fixed,"

or “I don’t hqve time to mesa with it."

These excuses signify that unconscious­

ly, potential voters are either complacent or they childishly rely on total strangers to bear the brunt o f voting. That’s like

uest V -^ o lu m

By Nadifa Abdi

3

giving your life savings to a hobo and as­

king him to hold it for you..

Some students and others on this campus are blissfully unaware o f who is running against Hudnut in local mayoral elections. His opponents are referred to as "that Democrat" and “Hudnut's op­

ponents."

Some don’t even realize there is an election this week. Yet these same people may complain about the state o f the economy.

Potential voters might decide that it’s easier to remain blameless for the ac­

tions o f politicians if they weren’t a party to electing them in the first place.

I can understand that reasoning be­

cause at times it does become a choice between personalities rather than issues.

However, not casting a vote is mnking a choice too. People have to decide if that is the cushion between a rock and a hard place.

There are thoee w he think that their vote makes a difference. These individu­

als not only vote regularly but they read newspaper accounts, listen to the politicians on radio and television and argue vehemently for their candidates with friends and family. They take their right to vote seriously.

There is another group in America also

serious about claiming their privilege to vote. Naturalised citizens turn out to vote and go through the information gathering process. They may not be straight-ticket voters but they go to the polls and cast their vote every op­

portunity they get.

Are they overzealous? Perhaps they are making up for loot time. Many have lived under governments denying them a voice and can now appreciate this pre­

cious right for what it la: a privilege and

a chance to make a political choice.

Aa a naturalized citizen, but one who grew ujp in this free system, I can’t con­

ceive o f having my voting right curtailed.

At the same time I realize that it’s not guaranteed everywhere and iU potential is overwhelming to me. I can pull the lever for my candidate on Tuesday and know that it was my choice. Then, 1 can learn to live with whatever candidate

Common voice is lost in high profile polls

( S u e st C o l u m C

Bx

“So long as we hope to continue govern ing ourselves, however roughly, by major­

ity will, public opinion analysis will be fully as important as study o f the hydrogen-helium cycle, and might have just as much bearing on what happens to our political and social systems during the rest o f this century.

-E ric Hodgin, former editor.

F ortu n e magazine

Zenobia Radford

3

I challenge the pollsters' failure to in­

clude a larger sampling from the popula­

tion in conducting public opinion sur­

veys.

The main source o f irritation in this reality is recent news reports indicating

the findings from opinion surveys. It has occurred to me that too many people that I don’t know are speaking on my behalf.

A few days ago, while watching televi­

sion news, I began questioning the validity o f these surveys. The dimension and depth o f these findings begin to have an impact as soon as you hear them, par­

ticularly when they come from high-

profile commentators such as Dan Rath­

er, Leslie Stahl and Jacqueline Adams.

The poll names are so descriptive and sophisticated that you're bound to listen and take notice when you hear them.

For example, there’s the Gallup Foil, Harris Poll, and the National Opinion Research Center - imagine ignoring a name as distinctive as the National Opinion Research Center.

It suddenly dawned on me that we may accept these analyses at face value, but who are these people being polled? What kind o f information influences their atti­

tudes and opinions?

Where do they vote?

S ICPA Division II NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR

1985 and 1986 SAGAMORE

Editor In Chief Publisher

Production Manager Grady Gunter Business Manager Erin Dulhanty Advertising Manager Stacy Shreder

Photo Editor Kemp Smith

Leslie L. Fuller News Editor Dennis Cripe Opinion Editor

Mick McGrath Sytvia Cunningham Arts/Entertalnment Richard Propes Free-Lance Editor Theresa Joyce Distribution Manager Steve Hayes

Staff Writers Paul Debono Nadrfa Abdi, Amy-Jeanne Ade Production Staff Kasa Bekele Debbie Esworthy, Joel Smock Brian Hendrickson

The Sagamore is an auutery enterprise o»

IUPUI, pub*shod weekly during tm regular school year The Sagamore is not an official publication of the university. and does not neces­

sarily reflect Vie views at university administra­

tors. (acuity and ofliers

All Sagamore editors are required to be en­

rolled si at least Ive IUPUI credit hours Start are past through advertssig revenue, t ie pnmary source of torx*ng supporting tie operaton of the

newspaper The Sagamore provides an open w i not be pttoluhed and tie w n te ri name can be torum tor the university community Readers are wrthhekJ upon request Anonymous totters canot invited to submit totters ol any length and on any be printed letters may be edtod tor danty and topic although preference w tl be given to tw se brevity and the erfltor w tl reject toners deemed less than 500 words which are related to matters potentially libelous, obscene, inflammatory or si ol interest to t ie IUPUI community poor taste Send tetters, preferably typed and

letters must include the water’s name, ad- double spaced to

dress w id telephone number Letters must also Sagamore

be dated and signed by t ie writer tor venficaoon 425 N Agnes S i Rm. CA 001G purposes Addresses and telephone numbers____________ IndUnapotls, IN «6202__________

What political party do they support?

How are the pollsters determining whether or not these individuals represent their counterparts? And which organizations are these individuals representing?

The questions kept coming. I had no answers.

I provided the quote from Hodgin not merely to provide the reader with back­

ground information, but rather to demonstrate a cause for discussion.

Hodgin speaks o f majority will and I beg to differ on this paint, since no one has ever polled me, nor have I ever been able to identify anyone who has been polled.

Why not poll a larger sampling of the papulation? In this senae, we would have a broader view and a better reflec­

tion o f the diversity in our society.

Hodgin indicates that public opinion analyses play a ihiyor role in determin­

ing what happens to our political and so­

cial systems. But since many o f us are never polled . . . isn’t that reason enough to feel like an outsider?

It disturbs me that U.S. Senators Richard Lugar and Dan Quayle are making decisions assuming they know what I feel and think.

It disturbs me further when 1 hear people profess to be speaking on behalf of a collective group.

In short, public opinion surveys in many ways are misleading by suggesting they reflect findings covering opinions from a fair representation of the popula­

tion.

I claim no authority on this issue. But it seems to me that anyone who has thought about this phenomenon would want to know who is speaking for them.

*

(6)

"P rin ce ss B rid e" a lm o s t fa ta l a ttr a c tio n

IN R E V IE W

Movies

By G REG W H ITLEY Once upon a t im e .. . there was a land where Spoof waa king.

Abbott and Costello made hor­

ror film*; a young Bob Hope made mysteriee; and throughout the land, audiences applauded.

Unfortunately, that place isn't where director/producer Rob Reiner, o f “ Hie Sure Thing* and

“Stand By Me* fame, went to film his new movie, "The Prin­

cess Bride."

Even so, “Princess Bride” is a spoof. That means it has

“spoofery."

And wit. My, but this movie has wit. Loads o f it. That’s the problem. An abundance o f clever conversation makes for a great after-dinner chat, but it makes poor narrative substance.

T h e Princess Bride" is a take­

off on swashbuckler films o f the 30s, 40s and 50a, principally Douglas Fairbanks Sr.’s T h e Mark o f Zorro" and Danny Kaye's 1956 classic T h e Court Jester’ , both o f which are per­

fect examples o f movies that were able to keep a fantastic im­

age without missing a beat.

T h e Princess Bride” can’t find one.

This plot-heavy epic is o f the

‘ odd movie in search o f an audience" genre. It’s a fairy tale, complete with monster, wizards, pirates, giants and royalty - but with adult wit. Sort o f like the old “Rocky and Bullwinkle”

cartoons, that had puns no child could understand. (Remember arch-villain, Boris Badinov whose name was a tum on Boris Gudinov, 16th century Russian tsar?)

In addition, the story is a con­

voluted mish-mash that follows secondary characters more than the movie's namesake. In fact, the best performances don’t even come from the principal players. That is, assuming the principals are Buttercup, the pleasantly bland princess bride, played by new-comer Robin Wright; and Westley, her farm- boy turned adventurer true love, athletically played by Cary Elwes.

It’s hard to toll who to focus on in this movie. A veritable Whit­

man's Sampler of bit part actors walk off with the show.

Billy Crystal and Carol Kane are fine as the wizard Miracle Max and his wife. Wallace Shawn, from “My Dinner with Andre," is also good as the leader o f the kidnappers.

Nevertheless, this is one fairy tale Rob Reiner should have closed the book on in mid- chapter. Unless you watched the fathers o f T h e Bride," you’ll have to find your happy endings elsewhere.

Life proceeds in a direction ex­

actly as planned. The goal is inches ahead, you reach out, you grasp. Success, right?

Not always. Sometimes, for in­

cidental reasons, the prize isn’t there. It moved six miles east.

That’s the case for Don Gal­

lagher. a top-rung New York lawyer played by Michael Douglas in this fall’s hottest

box-office draw, “Fatal Attrac­

tion."

At first, life is swell. Dan, love­

ly wife Beth (Anne Archer) and cute six-year-old daughter Ellen live in modern-day Norman Rockwell yuppie bliss as warm, loving husband/father Dan moves closer to partnership in the law firm.

R IV E R P O IN T E

APARTM ENTS

Free Transportation Service To:

IUPUI I.U. Med Center

Sports Center Downtown and

*1-2-3 Bedroom apte.

HEAT AND HOT WATER V4CLUDED

•Health Spa Faculties

•CkJbroom w i Big Screen TV

•Satellite TV avail.

"24 hr. Laundromat

•Jogging Track

•Pool, tennis, basketball & volley­

ball courts.

638-9869

1152 N. White River Pkwy. W. Dr.

(between 10th 4 16th St.) Mon. » Frl. 9 3 0 -5 :3 0 . Sat. 12-4:00

D e velop e d and M a n ag ed by S V C a m O r e g n D U P t ^

Alex Forest, convincingly played by Glenn Close, is a blonde, bronzed, ferociously sex­

ual new associate editor for a publisher Dan and his firm represent. From their first meet­

ing at a party, Dan and Alex crackle the air with adulterous attraction.

By their third meeting, Dan's life is irrevocably altered.

Predatory Alex stalks Dan as her claim.

This movie is about what hap­

pens when rules change in mid­

game, arid when a player learns there are no sure things. It turns out Alex is psychotic; and she w ont give Dan up. Things get worse when Alex announces she’s pregnant. This is all a fine premise. But this movie goes only just so far to follow through. What we have is a psychological thriller with no psychology. We don t get a clue why the characters do what they do. They go on plot auto-pilot.

When and why did Alex go loony? Why hadn’t someone dropped a net over her long ago?

Why is a woman as intelligent, attractive, and popular as Alex so desperately lonely?

Why does Dan risk his perfect

family life for a night o f heavy breathing? Why is Dan there?

It's easy to inject one’s own hunch, but the audience shouldn’t have to, with so few clues to go on.

Finally, there are fine per­

formances by Close, Douglas, and Archer. Indeed, these three do all the heavy lifting hers.

Director Adrian Lyne and screenwriter James Dearden give a good idea a too-pat, over­

wrought ending that turns this into a slasher movie for adults.

Fine acting, coupled with fair directing and a sell-out con cep t, level “Fatal Attraction” down to a so-so movie. Somewhere a great movie was lo s t Somehow the prize just isn’t there.

Chances are it moved six miles east.

CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE

is noon Thursday

Can y o u afford to gam ble w ith th e LSAT, GMAT,

GRE.or MCAT?

Probably not. Great grades alone may not be enough to impress the grad school of your choice.

Scores play a part. And that’s how Stanley H. Kaplan can help.

The Kaplan course teaches test-taking techniques, reviews course subjects, and increases the odds that you’ll do the best you can do.

So if you’ve been out of school for a while and need a refresher, or even if you’re fresh out of college, do what over 1 million students have done. Take Kaplan.

Why take a chance with your career?

S IA M X Y H . KAPLAN IDUCAIIONAI ( I N il R

» I I E . 4 6 th S I. S u ita « - } INDIANAPO LIS, IN 4 62 05 -7 4 26

jiT/Mt-assi

K A P L A N

SIANlfVH K An AN IDUCAIIONAI tlHTfS HD The world's leading test prep organization

C A LL TODAY! YOU CAN START RI GHT AWAY.

(7)

Nov 2, 1987 /

Tho S*A»G»A»M«0»R«E / Pag®

7

Reviewer stone-cold grooves to Big Dipper of Boston album

IN R E V IE W

Albums

B y JO E CAPARO*

S ta ff R e v ie w e r

Well, it's that time o f the month again, and you have to read about a bunch o f records you haven't heard by a bunch of groups you haven't heard of.

First up ie H eaven s, the new LP from the fantastic Big Dip­

per o f Boston. Hopefully you read the review o f their B oo- B o o EP earlier thia year, and their record sales skyrocketed.

Sure. Anyway, thia is their new album, and boy, is it a stone-cold groove. I don t know the last time that I heard such a noisy bunch of guitar innovators.

Probably because Big Dipper sets the precedents. Their sec­

ond Homestead outing.

H ea ven s contains not one, not two, but TEN, count ’em, ten spanking new tunes, and not a clinker in the bunch. Wonderful

Guadalcanal Diary, and it con­

tains muchas cartas buenas y bonitas, from "Winds O f Change" to "Things Pall Apart", as well as their really neat new single release "Litany (Life Goes On)." Guadalcanal Diary's sound is really casual and innovative, one that can fall in easily with this "new southern rock” genre label. Guitarist Murray Attaway has a pleasant, comfortable voice that you can listen to for hours, especially when it's backed by John Poe’s big drum beat and co-Ricken backer

fetishists Rhett Crowe and Jeff Walls on baas and guitars. In my book, almost anybody who plays Rickenbacker guitars is A- OK, so these guys and 1 X 4 get an A* from me. I guess you could say that I like this rec

songs like "All Going Out To­

gether", "She’s Fetching" and

"When Men Were Trains." These are some really powerful and momentum-packed songs, with hardly a second left to think.

Seek this one out and be the envy o f all your friends.

We also have the latest from the greatest, H igh P riest from a truly high and priestly guy, the innovative and unbelievably influential Mr. Alex Chilton. All I can eay is, this is the guy who’s influenced everyone from the Replacements to the Elvis Brothers while playing with everyone from the Box Tope to Big Star. He can do no wrong.

And he can write no bad songs.

Listen to this record and see if you don’t agree.

a X 4 is the latest recording available from Georgia’s own

and I also highly recommend that you see Guadalcanal Diary live at the Vogue in Broad Rip­

ple on the 9th.

The Red Hot Chili Peppers What more can 1 aayf What more do 1 need to eay? These guys are the hippeet moat bosco funk killers around. Fast, fast, fast, deadly accurate, and funkier than day-old bread.

Well, enough about how good they are, and on the the impor­

tant fact that they have a new LP out, the rambunctious new

that carries on in the P-frink tradition they helped establish w ithsuch land­

mark albums as ZZZ ZZZZ and ZZZZZZZZ. This record is bet­

ter than a cup o f Oval tine, and seeing them live at the Vague an the 16th ia even better than that.

Okay, one more record, and than you don t have to listen to me for another month or so,

okay? This album comes from some former bandmatee o f the aforementioned Big Dipper, an­

other Boston great, Dumptruck.

These guys are pretty darned nee to, and tar th e o o u n try is, too. The latest in a aerisa o f releases from Big Time, fo r the o o u n try carries on in the tradi­

tion at their earlier records, like D ia fo r D uasptruok and P o si­

tiv ely D u m ptru ck (I think maybe they like to eee their name in print). Dumptruck pro­

duces some good material, with more mature sounding songs such as "carefree", "going nowhere" and the title track. In­

teresting and different, as well aa highly recommended.

Special drink prices everyday I

I H

v u M w v m

LCLNGC

1517 N. Pennsylvania A vs. 635-9996

AH you can eat spaghetti night

6 pm- 10 pm... $ 3 .5 0 Friday

AH well drinks and canned beer ALL day Friday! ...$ 1 .0 0 Saturday

Hand-cut, rib-eye steak dinner 4 pm - Midnight ... $ 5 .7 5 Sunday

BEST AH you can eat Sunday buffet 5 pm- 10 pm... *... $ 5 .2 5 Buy one sandwich, gat second of equal

or greater value for FREE with thia ad.

TOMORROW'S OFFICE

t

Serving IUPUI!

□ IBM Word Processing

□ True letter qualty printing

Cell

Q 25% student discount a Resumes, term papers,

reports

317-852-2153

RESEARCH YOUR OPPORTUNITIES...

Limited number of efficiency. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available Don't m iss this opportunity to enjoy life close to the heartbeat of downtown Indy!

S H E E W C C D T C H 'E C

13th and Delaware

10th and Delaware

635-5356

* 1 0 M in. From I.U .P .U .I. &

M e d ic a l C e n te r

* Fre e Private Parking

* C o n te m p o ra ry Aduft Living

* G e n e ro u s S to ra g e A re a s

* Laun dry Facilities

* E asy W a lk T o B usline

•Vwtoprd t UMimrC k> ^

sycamoregrupy

(8)

Page 8 / The S-A-G-A-MO-R-E / Nov. 2,1987

Luxury Apartments in Downtown Indianapolis

Nine distinctive buildings Stylish studios, one & two bedroom apartments

Free parking provided Free Membership to IU PU I sport facilities

Microwave in every kitchen

■ • • te l Office located at 154 North

634-5555

K Revet Companies, Inc.

M a rk e t r tg & M a n a g e m e n t

Daily 9-6 Sat 10-6 Sun. 12-6

Tickets on sale for local winter concerts

B y R IC H A R D P R O P E S A rta /E n tertain m en t E d ito r Night life. It’s the heart and eoul o f college life. Whether ife J a » or punk, daaaical or heavy metal, after a rough week of cl eases, the word for the weekend i s . . . relax.

Relaxing it what ‘ Indy Nites*

ia all about. In the next few

months, 111 be looking at the bands, clubs, and people that make Indy e iu le.

This week, I want to take a brief look at the concerts ahead far the month o f November.

The big n ew s- tickets for the Dec. 10 John Cougar Mellen- camp go on sale Nov.

Market O tea ie Arena at 8.-00 14 at a.m. at all Ticketmaster loca­

tions except for Block’s. Tickets are $19.50 each.

Also at Market Square Arena, Ace Frehley joins Alice Cooper for a show this Friday, while Icehouse opens for the Cars an

Nov. 34. Rounding out the month, Dokken opens up for Aerosmith on Nov. 26.

It’s also going to be a hot month at the Vogue, with B a c h m a n -T u r n e r -O v e r d r iv e playing tomorrow night, Guadalcanal Diary on Friday, Steppenwolf on the 10th, and the Red-Hot Chili Peppers the 16th. Tickets are available at the Vogue box-office; call 255- 2828.

The hottest draw o f the month appears to be the Nov. 12 Pink

Floyd concert at the Hooeier Dome. A very select number of seats remain available for the show.

The folk music of Peter, Paul, and Mary will fill the acoustical­

ly perfect Clowes Hall on Nov.

22 at 7:30, while the In­

dianapolis J a n Club will play the Midway Motor Lodge on Nov. 13 at 8:00 p.m.

Watch ‘ Indy Nites* in upcom­

ing issues for all the latest news and trends in con­

temporary music.

J Best b£l r\

| fur the w eek en d

Indianapolis Civic Theatre opens their production o f Neil Simon’s recent Broadway smash

“Brighton Beach Memoirs,"this Saturday,the show runs through Nov. 22 on the Mains tag* at the Indianapolis Museum o f Art.

The show runs Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sun­

days at 2 p.m. Ticket prices range from $8-112. For informa­

tion call 923-4597.

F o lk A r t IMPORTS

Jewelry

m

Clothing*

Fabric

Art

"N ew C lothing an d jewelry along with w onderful artifacts from Africa and South A m erica."

AR TS AND CRAFTS FROM M EXICO . SOUTH AM ERICA.

A FR IC A , A S IA .

TH E EXOTIC.

PRIMITIVES UNIQUE.

6 5 0 3 North Carrolton Ave.

Indianapolis. IN. 4 6 2 2 0

Pennsylvania Place

Apartments

In 1985, a controversial novel portrayed the wild, excessive lives of the kids in Beveriy Hills.

On Friday, November 6th, brace yourself for the motion picture.

A ndrew M c C arthy

JAM IGERIZ

RO BERT D O W N EY JH

(9)

fM O R E NOTICES * Z T )

THURSDAY_________________________________________

The Vice-President's reception For international students and visitors will take place in the Union Building cafeteria from 4:30-6:30 p.m. For information call the International Student Services Office at 274-7294.

• M

The Psychology Club will sponsor a lecture by Dr. Carlos Goldberg on “Agoraphobia: Phobia of the 80’s" at 7:30 p.m.

in the Krannert Building Faculty Lounge on the 38th Street campus. Call Andy Everts at 283-1945 for more in­

formation.

* * *

A workshop on final revisions of papers entitled “ Beyond Proofreading--The Final Draft” will be offered by the Uni­

versity Writing Center from 11 a.m.-noon in Cavanaugh Hall Room 427. The techniques of editing-eliminating wordiness, adding precision, and correcting errors-will be explained and demonstrated.

S A T U R D A Y --- The Second Annual Indiana University Press Holiday Book Sale is scheduled in the main library through next Tuesday. Hours are 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. next Monday, and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. next Tues­

day. For more information, call Mary Beth Haas at (812) 335-6657.

• • •

The National Society of Black Engineers will conduct a meeting at noon in the Krannert Building Faculty Lounge on the 38th Street campus. For more information, call Bruce Dunston at 925-9502.

SUNDAY___________________________________________ _ The Psychology Club will take a caravan to Brown County, leaving from the Krannert Building parking lot on the 38th Street campus at 11 a.m. For details, call Andy Everts 283-1945.

ADDENDA_________________________________________

The V.A. Affairs (Office of the Registrar) reminds veterans that to receive advance pay for Spring 1988, they must not be enrolled this semester and must take a mini­

mum of six credit hours next semester. For more informa­

tion, call Gloria Rowe or Stephen Flynn at 274-15211 or 274-1522.

• • •

University Division need tutors for entry-level courses in accounting, anatomy, biology, chemistry, economics, engineering and technology, French, microbiology, physics, and Spanish. Interested students must have received an

“A" grade in the course and have an overall GPA of 3.25.

Call Jo Lewis at 274-5977 for more information.

T $ $ M A K E $20.00 T O D A Y $$ "l

I I

DONATE PLASMA PLASMA HELPS SAVE LIVES I I NOW PAYING

$ 2 0 .0 0

I

I For first time donors I

I I

$12.00 for each time after (up to twice a week)

[ Indianapolis Blood Plasma , Inc. J

502 North Capitol Avenue Indpls, IN 46204

| 637-3294 |

i_______________________ _________ __________________ ______________ i

Nov 2, 1987 / Th^3«A»G»A*tl«0»R»E / Pape 9 4

HOT DOGS 6* MORE

Q J W * :

Stacy Bumpas (left) and Kim Lawson drassad as Siamasa twins In ona big orange t-ahirt at last Thursday night's HaSowaan dance aUheUnioon.

HEAD HUNTER SALON

3746 Lafayette Bd.

291-5363 Open Mon-Sat.

Pam's Special Prtc for Students one Senior Citizens

Haircuts i

S h am p oo

A

Set Perms start a t: $ M anicure

A place you'll like

Student rent discount

&

$75.00 Deposit

1 Bedroom. 662 to 70 0 sq. ft.

2 Bedroom. 2 full baths, 1064 aq. ft.

3 Bedroom. 2 full baths. 1278 sq. ft.

3300 West 30th S t 025-7579

Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat-10-5 Sun.-1-S

NEWLY REMODELED!

FEATURING

✓ Call now fo r November reduced rent rates!

S Easy aoceea to Downtown,

✓ Lafayette Square Ac IU P U l

/ Quiet atmosphere

. w s l t o taw dry facilities At storage

* Draperies Included

Water, sewer A trash pick up paid

Referensi

Dokumen terkait

Eligibility Requirements: Student must be a rising/current senior IUPUI undergraduate student previously enrolled part-time completed less than 12 credit hours per semester for the

- 90 - Responsible for achieving the target Center for Academic and Student Counseling Specified Target .E-2-7- To provide counseling services for high school students in general