The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 29, 1986 - Page 5 Lopez (Continued from Page 1)' where they want to go to and are self- a ssured, which is a positive thing." THE STUDENTS have also ' helped her sharpen up her skills, she said. Lopez said the key to attracting dnd keeping students at the University is to create "a feeling of ,lelongingness and community, that their ideas are listened to and incorporated, that they feel a part of w the community and not alienated. This is a big thing for anybody, not Just minorities." She said that con - ~tipuing to provide cultural pro - grams and activities is an important part of this, but as of yet, no new =pograms or changes are in the ,w.orks. "I haven't really had time to < l.ink about it. The biggest issue right now is getting student organ - zations to join and come together --so they can coordinate their efforts."{ y ACCORDING TO Lopez and University students, one problem 1 ,Fispanic students experience is that' the University and many students' , tend to see them as one group when in fact they are composed of many ,djfferent groups such as Puerto Ricans, Central Americans, and South Americans. - Roberto Javier Frisancho, pres -I ident of the United Farm Workers" support group on campus, said, "A ,lot of people assume you're Puerto -]Rican or Mexican, and assume that will all Hispanics are the same." "Some may think you wear sombreros, eat tacos, and other things they may associate with Mexicans-and I have nothing against Mexicans, but Peruvians have their own culture and food too.", support University last month. Lopez was so busy meeting and organizing student groups that she has only recently found an apart - ment in Ann Arbor's tight housing market.' "I'm still not settled in yet," she said last week. Her nine-year old 'A lot of people assume you're Puerto Rican or Mexican, and assume that all Hispanics are the same...Some may think you wear sombreros, eat tacos, and do other things they may associate with Mexicans. -Robert Javier Frisancho, President of United Farm Workers support group Because of the diversity among Hispanic students, coordinating activities for different groups can be challenging, said Lopez. Stu - dents said she did a good job organizing Hispanic Heritage Celebration week. "SHE'S' PRETTY ener - getic...I'm just amazed that she was able to get things together so quickly," said Anne Martinez, the president of SALSA Socially- Active Latino Students Association. "She came in just two weeks before Hispanic Heritage Celebration and did a great job of pulling it all together, and getting Cesar Chavez here was a major accomplishment." Chavez, the president of the United Farm Workers Union, spoke at the daughter, who had been staying with Lopez's parents in Cleveland, came to joing Lopez a few weeks ago. L OPEZ'S parents emigrated from Puerto Rico in the 1950s and settled in Cleveland, where Lopez was born and raised, the fourth oldest of nine children. After graduating from high school, Lopez wanted to go on to college, but she lacked the funds and the support of her father, who felt women should work, then settle down and get married. "He thought it was a waste. He thought: why invest money for me to go to school when I should get married and have children," said Lopez. Lopez's father "believed it was, Hispan not beneficial for the family or me to go on to college. He believed it was more beneficial to get a job and bring in money for our family." Lopez said family obligations are traditionally stronger for minorities than for white students-"especially in the Hispanic culture .. .and not just for the immediate family, but the ex - tended family. It goes on to cous - ins, uncles, grandparents." LOPEZ GOT a job as a secretary at Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, working in the Project Talent Search office, which was involved in recruiting minority students and helping them pursue higher education. "For months I saw all these people going to college, planning their futures," she said. "And after seeing everbody else, I figured I can do it too." By that time, Lopez was already on her own, and knew the ins and outs of getting financial aid and academic and counseling assistance. Lopez was busy for the next three years, working full-time at the college, attending classes part-time for two of those years, and raising her infant daughter. WITH THE money she earned from work-and some support from home-Lopez enrolled at Bowling Green University, but she had more hurdles to overcome. "The first couple years, I did not find any support. I was a non- traditional student, a bit older, and with a child," said Lopez. "I did not feel any sense of belonging, I went on campus to attend course or to go to the library and Xerox things, but I did most of my work at home. But Lopez did become active in the Latin student group on campus. There were no specific Hispanic programs or offices officially linked to the administration at Bowling Green, so student organizations ic students were especially important. She said it was her involvement with these groups that sparked her interest in working with students. Lopez graduated in 1984 with a degree in business administration, helping to pave the way for her younger sisters to go on to college. SHE SAID her father finally realized that "women need some - thing to fall back on...an education, so they can survive." But when Lopez decided to go on to graduate school, she again had to overcome resistance from her father, although her sisters in college supported her. "Regardless of support or not, I still did what I wanted to do," said Lopez. "But interestingly enough. although they never said anything in the two or four years I was in school,when I graduated with my masters they were quite proud." Her family attended her grad - uation ceremony Aug. 16, and two days later Lopez was in Ann Arbor. Now her parents often ask her to come home, and she too feels a little homesick. "My nine sisters and brothers and I are real close," said Lopez, "but being far away from home, my daughter hasn't developed the same sense of family that I grew up with, which is the base for me." Lopez said someday she hopes to return home, to help her nieces and nephews and serve as a role model for them. Author sells out Hill Auditorium (Continued from Page 1) THE SPEECH was part of the il Street Forum Great Writers ยง,eries, a program sponsored by -illel. The group sold out the entire auditorium at $5, $8, and $10 "aticket. ' Vonnegut described censorship s a "disease" that has only recently "become recognized and treated. "The gestation period for liberty is 200 years or more. Liberty is now, I figure, in the eighth month of 'development," he said. Vonnegut, in his early 60s, continually referred to children and tfie task of improving America that faces future generations. "WHEN I was in seventh grade, we looked around and saw the Country was not nearly what it could be," Vdinnegut said. "We daydreamed for our children...the kinds of houses they would have. We designed utopian cities for them to live in. Now it is our grandchildren's country. We have come a long way, and have a long way to go. "The youngest people here must dream for our grandchildren and fight for it, too." According to Vonnegut, who has taught creative writing at the University of Iowa, the key to writing great literature lies not in command of the language, but in the author's passion for the subject. "You have to look for people who are passionate, care very much about something," Vonnegut said. "Somebody very smooth, good with the language but with no passion might as well go to Wall Street." In addition to a writing lesson for the audience, Vonnegut offered advice for personal lives plagued with "formless discontent": "People now expect lives to have a rise and fall. What they're saying is, 'Our lives are lousy stories.' They're saying to their spouses, 'Couldn't you get cancer and get it over with? We're boring the neighbors shitless."' CLASSES STARTING OCTOBER 29, 1986 203 E. Hoover 662-3149 CALL DAYS, EVENINGS & WEEKENDS =5"4 KAPLAN OCAiNAL CENTER LTD. TESTPREPMRAT0NSPECIALIS'SSSNCE 1938 To the men of Alpha Tau Omega: THE MEN of SIGMA NU challenge you to a meeting on the gridiron for the Annual Blackfoot/Whitefoot game TAKE YOUR PUNISHMENT Dr. Marc Ellis Toward a Jewish Theology of Liberation Dr. Ellis is the founder and director of the Institute for Justice and Peace at the Mary Knoll School of Theology. He is the author of Faithfulness in anAge of Holocaust and a book bearing the same title as his talk. Wednesday, October 29 " 8:00 p.m. 1429 Hil Street Co-Sponsor: Office of Ethics and Religion Ilflfd 1429 Hill Street 663-3336 WE WANT YOUR DIRTY LAUNDRY & CLEANING We will give it back to you clean and folded just.like mom used to do for just 90C a pound. ONE DAY SERVICE available U of M Students 10% off (bring I.D. cards) 715 N. University 662-1906 ANN ARBOR Three stores away from Kresge's in the downstairs of Hamilton Sq. Mall WITH ADDITIONAL SPONSORSHIP FROM 10044M/i... You'll drive the revolutionary Dodge Daytona Turbo Z through a competition rally course set up right here on campus. Your lap will be electronically timed and the student with the best* official score wins a trip to Daytona Beach to compete in the National Grand Finals. *complete rally and prize award rules available at competition site. GOODY EAR UNOCAL0 lZA'a...Over $125000 in prizes wIl be awarded in the 5th Annual National Collegiate Driving Championships brought to you by Dodge and other participating sponsors. National Grand Finals Awards 1st Place - $5,000 cash scholarship and use of a Dodge Daytona Turbo Z for 1 year 2nd Place - $3,000 cash scholarship and use of a Dodge Daytona Turbo Z for 1 year 3rd Place- $2,000 cash scholarship and use of a Dodge Daytona Turbo Z for 1 year FLOPPY DISCS ocean pacific iAr1, . 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