Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 16, 1986 Mazrui refutes film Cf By STEVE KNOPPER University Prof. Ali Mazrui called the National Endowment for the Humanities' reaction to his controversial television series "The Africans" an "overreaction" in an interview yesterday. "I think it was also dangerous. The NEH was trying to narrow the range of views shown on public television," he said. "T H E Africans," a Public Broadcast System series narrated by Mazrui, made its debut last week and the second segment was aired last night. Last month NEH chairman Lynne Cheney removed the organization's name from the series' list of sponsors, saying, "worse than unbalanced, this film frequently degnerates into anti- Western diatribe." But the NEH's initial $615,000 contribution to the series was not withdrawn. Mazrui denounced the idea that "public funds cannot be used to be critical of the government." "Am I supposed to sound neutral over such things as the African Slave Trade?" Mazrui asked. In response to the NEH's charge that the series tried to blame every problem in Africa on the West, Mazrui said, "In those parts which deal with the unsavory part of American culture, I do sound critical." MAZRUI implies that most of present-day Africa's problems stem from the missionaries and slave traders from the west, the European colonialists' arbitrary imposition of national borders which carved up the continent, and capitalists who have plundered the continents natural resources. He also blames much of the African violence on weapons imported from the West. Thomas Holt, director of the University's Center of Afro- American Studies, said the series will be "a very useful teaching tool in cultural change." He said the NEH's actions were a "rather silly kind of response, which immediately shows the need for such a series." HOLT said the NEH's response "reflects willful ignorance." He said it was "dangerous and scary (that) these people make the policy in the United States." Mazrui called his presentation of the series "an African looking at Africa for western viewers." He said such a presentation will be "good for the West and good for the world." Niara Sudarkasa, professor of anthropology, said the series was, "so far, very informative, especially for persons not familiar with the (African) situation. It generally should add an important dimension to our awareness of African cultures and issues. "PERSONALLY, I don't think I saw anything that warranted the action taken by the NEH," Sudarkasa said. The NEH also said the program glorified Libyan leader Moammar Khadafi in episode nine. Manzrui said this view reflects a "double- standard. America subsidizes movements of violence in places such as Nicaragua. . . Khadafi subsidizes other movements. "I do try to humanize Khadafi," Mazrui said. "Much of American portrayal of him has lost perspective." The references to Khadafi last for less than a minute in the nine-hour series and have been "blown up because of American hysteria," he said. MAZRUI, who was born in Kenya, had a Muslim upbringing, and a western education, narrates all 'iticism nine segments of the program. He said the series grew out of the Reith Lectures, the prestigious British Broadcasting Company radio segments he narrated in 1979. The BBC, calling Mazrui "Africa's Allistair Cooke," suggested the television series, which became reality in 1981. Mazru i ... defends series Researchers find gene vital NEW YORK (AP)-Researchers have found the long-sought gene responsible for the most common form of muscular dystrophy, a "historic discovery" that could lead to the first direct treatment of this now-incurable disease. The Muscular Dystrophy Asso- ciation, which provided much of the financial support for the research, cautioned that the discovery would not immediately help children with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, an illness that afflicts 20,000 to 50,000 American boys who will not survive beyond their 20s. "WE'RE extremely encouraged and excited by this historic discovery," said Donald Wood, the association's associate director of research. "It's a very big step for- ward in our efforts to conquer this disease, but we still have 'a long way to go to develop treatments." The discovery of the gene by Louis Kunkel, Anthony Monaco, and colleagues at Children's Hos- pital and Harvard Medical School in Boston caps several years of unusual cooperation by scientists around the world. In a report to be published today in Nature magazine, Kunkel and Monaco describe the isolation of a segment of genetic material that makes up about 10 percent of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene. This piece of the gene can now be used to isolate the entire gene. THE RESEARCHERS also report that the gene appears to serve as the blueprint for manufacture of a protein in muscle tissue. Duchenne muscular dystrophy is an inherited disease marked by gradual death of muscle tissue. It occurs when the protein is misssing or altered. Scientists had presumed that the defective protein responsible for the disease was located in muscle tissue, but so little had been known about the ailment that scientists had been unable to prove that-until now. Kunkel and his collaborators found that the gene had produced in muscle tissue a substance called messenger RNA, an intermediate step in the production of a protein by the gene. KUNKEL SAID telephone interview yester the next critical step in the r will be to identify thel encoded by the gene, a s forward task that cou accomplished within a year that happens, Kunkel said," go back and look at patients how their protein differ normal, to understand the iology of the disease." When the physiolo to MD cure understood, researchers might be in a able to devise ways to alter it-thus a that ameliorating or even curing the lesearch disease. protein "It could be a long way off," traight- Kunkel said. "What we don't want yld be is for everybody to say, 'Now that . Once the gene is cloned (identified), next we can year there will be a cure for , to see muscular dystrophy.' This does not s from mean that. It means we can e phys- attempt to understand what's wrong, then maybe design rational gy is treatment." )ngly accept IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS House passes immigrant bill WASHINGTON- The House passed a bill yesterdady to slow the influx of illegal aliens with a carrot-and-stick program of amnesty for those with roots and penalties for employers who hire undocumented workers. The compromise legislation, writen by a conference committee, went to the Senate after the 238-173 vote. The bill had been forced off the House floor late last month in an embarrassing procedural defeat that left sponsors pronouncing it dead. But with nearly 5,000 aliens apprehended on a typical day, not to speak of those who elude U.S. Border Patrol and other authorities, sponsors resuscitated the legistlation within the last week. The bill would use as its "stick" a system of fines and prison terms against employers who knowingly hire undocumented workers. As a' balancing "carrot," those who crossed the border illegally before 1982 and established roots in the United States would be given legal status. To protect Hispanics, the bill would create new protections against employment discrimination based on national origin or citizenship status. A special counsel would be created in the Justice Department to enforce the protections. Employers of three or fewer people would be exempted from that provision. Soviets start Afghan pullout SHINDAND, Afghanistan-Communist Party chief Najibullah threw flower petals at about 1,500 members of a Soviet tank regiment who clanked away in a dusty column yesterday on their long and well- publicized trip home. The departure from a parched basin in this region near the Iranian frontier began the withdrawal of about 8,000 of the estimated 115,000 Soviet soldiers who help the communist government fight Moslem guerrillas. Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev promised the pullout in July, during a speech in Vladivostok. Moscow has contended that Afghan government forces are much stronger now than when it sent the first troops to Kabul in December 1979. Western diplomats in Afghanistan say the withdrawal is insignificant, a gesture timed to ward off criticism during annual U.N. debate on the Afghan war later this year. Scientists share Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden-Two Americans and a Canadian won the Nobel Prize in chemistry yesterday, and three Europeans shared the physics prize, with all six cited for helping man to peer into the tiny world of molecules and atoms. Dudley Herschbach of Harvard University, Yuan Lee of the University of California at Berkeley, and John Polanyi of the University of Toronto shared the chemistry prize for their study of how molecules interact to form new substances, the Swedish Academy of Sciences said. It said their work "provided a much more detailed understanding of how chemical actions take place." The academy awarded the physics prize to three inventors of high- powered microscopes: Ernst Ruska of West Berlin, who built the first electron microscopes in the 1920s and 1930s; and Gerd Binnig of Frankfurt, West Germany, and Heinrich Rohrer of Switzerland, who designed a new type of electron microscope calfed the scanning tunneling microscope. Mich courts use house-arrest DETROIT-Nonviolent criminals throughout Michigan soon could be serving time in their homes instead of behind bars- judges willing, of course. A monitoring program that ties offenders electronically to their homes when they're not at work, school, or counseling has proven so successful that state Department of Corrections officials are expanding it statewide next month. Deputy Director Perry Johnson said his office will invite the state's circuit court judges this week to try the system, already tested successfully in four Michigan counties. "We're prepared to handle about 200 offenders and will expand the program as necessary to keep up with the judges' requests," Johnson said. "It's an excellent alternative for short-term prison confinement and may even have more lasting value than a stint in jail." The system relies on a transmitter attached to the offender's ankle with a security band that cannot be removed without being cut, he said. A monitoring device installed in the offender's home- attached via telephone to a central computer- picks up a coded signal from the transmitter within a range of about 150 feet. An automatic alarm alerts a state computer whenever the felon violates his curfew- either by leaving home early or coming home late, or by tampering with or disconnecting the system. Hope fades in San Salvador SAN ,SALVADOR, El Salvador-With hope rapidly fading of finding further survivors, rescue workers yesterday began dismantling the Ruben Dario building, where hundreds of earthquake victims were killed, trapped, or injured. The five-story downtown office complex was flattened by the quake that hit San Salvador on Friday, toppling, destroying, or cracking hundreds of buildings; leveling more than 2,000 homes; leaving 982 known dead; and injuring more than 8,000. The Ruben Dario building was the hardest hit, but more than 150 people were pulled alive from its wreckage by rescuers who tunneled into the debris, crawling through the dark holes and narrow passages to remove workers one by one. Even with those successes in five days of painstaking digging under a broiling sun and amid the stench of death, hundreds were feared still beneath the wreckage. Dozens of bodies were taken out in the first few days. hIw Atirijigan BZIVI Vol. XCVII -- No. 31 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. 4 fir.. TAs str contract (Continued from Page 1) TAs requested a 5.7 percent pa increase to offset the high cost living in Ann Arbor, a 10 percei increase in tuition waivers, and pal TA training. University official offered a 4.7 percent salary increas( a 3 percent tuition waiver, and pa TA training in only son departments, according to a GE( newsletter. THE DIFFERENCE betwee the TAs' position and t- mediator's proposals breaks dow, to about $110 per term, for moi TAs. "The (bargaining) team felt thz the proposal was just sweet enoug] to cut the legs out from under an, strike," said Matthew Schaefer, c settlement Haddy praised GEO member involvement, saying, "The membership got us at least half of the tuition increase. The University now ews us as an active union." HADDY believes that this will be a great asset to the GEO during future negotiations. "The bargaining team can ask for things knowing that the membership is behind us in a pinch." In the future the GEO should push for a full tuition exemption for teaching assistants, and those terms should be non-negotiable, according to Diane Young, a teaching assistant in the Department of English, who voted against the settlement. Young also stressed the importance of GEO involvement during negotiations. "Activity within the membership was a definite factor." 502 of the union's 1,800 members voted. 426 were in favor of the ratification, 75 were against, and one abstained. ., the GEO bargaining team History Department. and UM News in The Daily 764-0552 M" WDET Welcomes to the Power Center October Blues Fest! 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