Page 8-Saturday, March 17,;1979-The Michigan Daily Speakers recall relocation camps (Continued from Page 1) barracks, surrounded-by barbed-wire fences and armed guards with machine guns." Kitano spoke of the indignity of this treatment. "Whenever I think of that era, I take at least a couple shots of maalox," he said. - The plight of the Japanese- Americans during the period after the bombing of Pearl Harbor is only men- tioned in one or two paragraphs of most history books, according to Kitano. Both of the prominent Japanese- Americans mentioned the importance of making the American people aware of the period of hisltory where the civil rights of one group of people were disregarded. "WE HAVE TO get it into the history books. We have to keep reminding the people how fragile the constitution and bill of rights really are," said Mineta. "Civil liberties do not sustain them- selves: Constant vigilance is required," he continued. Mineta said if the rights of one group or individual can be taken away, then the rights of any group can be removed. Kitano spoke of the danger of stereotypes, stating that he believes there may have been a correlation bet- ween the dropping of the bomb in Hiroshima and the internment of Japanese Americans. He said his people were often called dehumanizing names like "rats and dogs." It is not that difficult to get rid of people that are less than human," he said. "WHENEVER YOU think of an ethnic joke, think of the possible con- sequences," Kitano added. Speaking on the status of Japanese Americans today, Mineta said the past two decades have been successful for Japanese Americans, stating his own progress from a U.S. internment camp to the U.S. Congress as an example. Nevertheless, he said, "our acceptance level is like a roller coaster, depending on how U.S. relations with Japan are." The symposium was sponsored in conjunction with the showing of "Executive Order 9066," a photo exhibit depicting the experiences of Japanese-Americans during the second World War. The exhibit features the award-winning photos of Dorthea Lange and will be at the Union Gallery until April 6. Student (Continued from Page 1)t "The University has dragged on too long," commented one protester yesterday, "people are ready to go." In the past year, the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) and other student organizations have won many of their goals. Students, after threatening to boycott the current Un- virsity presidential selection process, were able to gain candidate inter- viewing rights which was viewed as an important concession on the part of the Regents. A group of Hill area dorm residents organized and successfully defeated an administration-backed plan to consolidate dining facilities on University Prof. dies University Prof. Henry Vaughan, dean emeritus of the University School of Public Health, died here March 14. He was 89. Prof. Vaughan, who served as health commissioner of Detroit from 1919 to 1941, is survived by a son, Henry Vaughan, Jr., of Grosse Pointe, Mich.; four grandchildren; and three great grandchildren. Cremation has taken place. Interment will be at Forest Hills Cemetery in Ann Arbor. His wife, Grace Seeley Vaughan, preceeded him in death. The remarkable contributions of Prof. Vaughan to the University were part of a family tradition-his father, Victor Vaughan, M.D., was dean of the University's Medical School for 30 years. groups the hill. And in January, the Union Program Committee won its fight to restructure the governing of the Michigan Union to provide more student input. Political parties on campus are also gaining strength through better inter- nal organization and cooperation bet- ween themselves. The People's Action Coalition (PAC) is a good example of this phenomenon. PAC has become a strong force in MSA and the Literary College Student Government (LSA- SG). Many PAC members also belong to the WCCAA, the Samoff Support Committee and others., MSA has also this year started to straighten out its internal affairs, and through strong leadership is beginning gaining to rid itself of a shoddy reputation caused by financial scandals in the early and mid-seventies. MSA now commands a $2.92 support fee from every University student, which, in addition, links the gover- nment to a substantially expanded Student Legal Services program. In the past few years students have also felt great pressures to find a good job, and for economic reasons, concen- trated on getting an education for a good career. Now, according to some students, the economic realities con- fronting students are telling them that the prosperity of the system is declining, and that there won't be enough jobs for them. Feeling hopeless, many say they have nothing to lose by strength protesting. "You just have to work all that much harder," one student said, "and then the frustration builds to do something constructive." But despite the increase in campus political activity by particular student leaders and groups, it still remains to be seen whether the impetus of their recent actions will spread to the rest of the University's students, many of whom are primarily concerned with competing in the tight job market. Also unresolved is whether students will still feel content in accepting the Univei- sity's policies. Gaining more widespread student support is the next, and most crucial, step for campus ac- tivists. Black English case set for trial REDUCED RATES for RILIARDS everyday to 6:00 pm at the U NION By ELEONORA DI LISCIA After two years of motions and counter-motions, what has become known as the "Black English case" will finally cometo trial on June 11th. District Court Judge Charles Joiner rejected the Michigan Board of Education's third straight attempt to dismiss the case last Tuesday, paving the way for the trial. THE CASE involves 12 minority children from the Green Housing Project who are attending Martin Luther King Junior Elementary School. Lawyers for the children contend the school has failed to take into account a black English language barrier and has thus failed to educate the children. As a result, they say, the students have been mislabeled as learning disabled and emotionally impaired. The plaintiffs originally consisted of 15 children but the claims of three of those children have been dismissed because they have moved to another school district. According to their mother, Carrie Brownlee, they are now performing noticeably better in school. The Michigan Board of Education's third motion to dismiss the suit was in response to the children's second amended complaint. The Board said in the motion that the complaint had not followed the judge's order to remove references to cultural and economic barriers. The Board also claimed the plaintiffs had not told the Board specifically enough what kind of action they wanted the Board to take in regar- ds to the children. "WE WANT TO have the district obligated to serve these children ap- propriately and to recognize that they come from a different base and that they really acknowledge that they have a responsibility to be concerned and Open: 10:00 am Mon-Fri 1:00 pm Sat & Sun Italian Pan L 0 C U, Eu " N 0 IA a -9. 4. C " Y t/! A- Pizza By The Slice * Antipasto Salads * Wine* the COUNT hasaor ~tip Beer * Liquor * Spaghetti U, w 0. ,ri v e d o 0 University - i.m.-2 a.m. -12 a.m.. auiM 9 spotes O4sod!4uv ' search for effective ways to teach these children," said Ruth Zwiefler of the Student Advocacy Center, which is representing the children. Since the suit began, a new reading-management program has been instituted in Ann Arbor schools. The new program, which began district-wide last fall, uses a step by step approach to reading and a lot of testing. "Basically,; what a reading management system does is break- down the details of the goals that are to be reached. As a child moves through the program be would work on two or three objectives at a time and be tested regularly so before he advanced he would have accomplished that step," said Lee Hansen, Assistant Superinten- dent for Curriculm and Instruction in the Ann Arbor Public Schools. Hansen said this system is more ef- ficient and will hopefully prevent the types of problems that have come up in the suit. Charles Overberger, University vice president for research and director of the Macromolecular Research Cen- ter, has been selected as the 1979 recipient of the International Award in Plastics Science and Engineering, the most prestigious honor given by the Society of Plastic Engineers (SPE). Overberger will deliver an Award Lecture to a plenary session of the ANTEC on the morning of May 10. His lecture, entitled "Recent Aspects of Research in Macromolecules," will consst of three general topics: the use of polymers as catalysts in organic reactions; the conformation of asym- metric polyamides in solution; and the grafting of nucleic acid bases onto hydrophilic chains.-~ i TONITE at 7 & 9;15 MLB 4 $1.50 Brooks' maddening, irreverent parody of the science-creates- monster genre (complete with zipped necks). 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