-The Michigan Daily-Monday, January 25, 1988- Page 3 Kemp attacks GOP 'old guard' By The Associated Press Rep. Jack Kemp portrayed him- self yesterday as a populist and GOP presidential front-runners George Bush and Bob Dole as the "old guard of the Republican party" while a new poll threw the Democratic race in Iowa up for grabs. Kemp complained that Bush and Dole would "definitely be a step back from what Ronald Reagan started in 1980. "Bush and Dole represent the old guard of the Republican Party," he said on CBS' "Face the Nation," ig- noring his own 18 years i n Congress. "I would like to see the Republi- can Party have a populist as its can- didate, not an elitist," Kemp said, adding that the GOP should look beyond the "country clubs... and Fortune 500 companies" to the poor, minorities, and elderly. The seven Democrats met in New Hampshire in debate - the second in a three-day string - as the poll published in yesterday's Des Moines Register underscored the uncertainty of their race in the final two weeks before Iowa's crucial caucuses. "It is taking a while to get to know this generation of leaders, Iowa Democratic chair Bonnie Campbell said. The poll showed Missouri Rep. Richard Gephardt, Illinois Sen. Paul Simon, and Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis bunched tightly together - Gephardt at 19 percent, Dukakis at 18 percent, and Simon at 17 percent. Hot on their heels were Jesse Jackson with 11 percent and former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt at 10 percent. Former Sen. Gary Hart's support among Iowa Democrats dropped off dramatically; the poll put him at 13 percent, half his support of a few weeks ago. Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore Jr. trailed far behind. As the Democrats debated in New Hampshire, site of the leadoff Feb. 16 primary, a new poll in the state showed Dukakis maintaining a comfortable lead among his neigh- bors. Dukakis was the choice of 37 percent of the New Hampshire Democrats surveyed by the Los An- geles Times, followed by Simon at 19 percent and Babbitt at 13 percent. The other Democrats registered in the single digits; again Hart was the big loser, falling to 6 percent sup- port. The New Hampshire poll held encouraging news for Kemp, who was the choice of 18 percent of the Republicans surveyed, right behind Dole's 22 percent. Bush led all six Republicans with 35 percent. Dukakis joined Kemp on the NBC talk show, and criticized the Reagan administration's continued support of the Nicaraguan Contras. Asian American groups- present Daily Photo by ROBIN LOZNAK Bowled over LSA senior Suzanne Pierce, Engineering senior Howard Chu, LSA junior Todd Bakal, and Engineering senior Dean Carter anticipate a question yesterday during a college quiz bowl match. Their team, The High Priests of Ubizmo, lost to The Mixed Quartet. Pro-Choice groups make final push for state-funded abortions, .0 writing By JIM PONIEWOZIK 1 Playwright Frank Chin and Poet Lawson Inada, co-editors o f Aiiieeeee!, an anthology of Asian- American literature, held a creative writing workshop and read from their works this weekend as part of the Asian Awareness Month Creative Writing Forum. The forum also included a Saturday night performance by Japanese-Canadian folksinger Terry Watada. Chin, whose works are among the first by an Asian-American to be performed on stage and television, read from his plays T h e Chickencoop Chinaman and The Year of the Dragon to an audience of about 40 people at the Michigan Union's Kuenzel Room Friday night. Chin, whose impassioned readings drew laughter from the crowd of about 40 people, said he and Inada decided to undertake the project of compiling Aiiieeeee! to draw attention to Asian-American writers, who he said have largely been overlooked. "We wanted to begin the process of legitimizing Asian American literature as literature," said Chin. AIIIEEEEE! WAS also intended to help debunk some common stereotypes about Asians, Chin added. "We've been treated as a handicapped people, less than. intelligent. We've demonstrated through our writing that we can express ourselves creatively without stereotyping, like Charlie Chan, and without falsifying our history," said Chin. Inada said the editors took the title for the anthology from American war movies and comic forum books, in which "they'd always show (Asians) dying and screaming 'Aiiieeeee!"' Inada read from his book, Before the War, the first collection of poetry by an Asian-American released by a major publishing firm, at the University's Museum of Art Saturday night, and was accompanied by Watada, who also performed his own material. WATADA, WHO has produced five plays in addition to his work 'as a singer, said his lyrics draw upon the experiences of Asian-Americans, such as his parents, who were held in Japanese-Canadian concentration' camps during World War II. "The Japanese-Canadians were actually treated worse than the Americans," said Watada. "They were actually exiled from the West coast... they were given a choice: Either give up your citizenship and go back to Japan - where they'd never been - or pack up and move east of the Rockies." Saturday afternoon, Chin and Inada led a creative writing workshop which focused on creative writing. THE FORUM and other Asian Awareness month activities were organized by Minority Student Services and a host of student groups, including the Asian American Association, the Uni- versity of Michigan Asian Student Coalition, the Korean Student Association, the Indian American Student Association, and the Vietnamese Student Association.t- Rackham graduate student John Yamamoto, who helped organize the event, said the groups hoped ,to "counter the impression of Asian Americans as non-verbal illiterates or people who can't express themselves creatively." By VICKI BAUER Time is running out for supporters of state-funded abortions in Michigan. They must submit 120,000 valid signatures to the state legislature by Feb. 15 to stop legislation eliminating Medicaid funds for abortions. Pro-Choice groups have collected 140,000 signatures but need at least 40,000 more to ensure enough valid signatures. Last February, members of the Right to Life movement submitted a 450,000-signature petition calling for legislators to prohibit Michigan Medicaid-funded abortions, except if an abortion is necessary to save a mother's life. The Right to Life petition, Public Act 59, was accepted by state legislators last summer and will become law April 1 unless Pro- Choice supporters pull through with enough signatures to delay implementation. IF PRO-CHOICE gets the signatures, state voters will make the final decision on November's election ballot. If a majority vote is received in November, PA 59 will be repealed. Coordinator of the People's Campaign for Choice (PCC) Molly Henry said the rarely-used "initiative process" that the Right to Life movement used to change the law requires signatures from five percent of the people who voted in the past gubernatorial election. The Governor has no power to veto the law if approved by the state legislature. "The Right to Life people took the initiative process because they knew it was the only way to get around the Governor," Henry said. IN PAST YEARS Gov. James Blanchard and former Gov. William Milliken have vetoed cutting off Medicaid funding of abortions, Henry said. Both the state House and Senate approved Right To Life's initiative by a simple majority, which declared immediate implementation of the law last April. PCC battled in court with Right to Life for four months to decide when the law would take effect. "The state constitution is not clear about the initiative process," Henry said. "For the law to take effect immediately, a two-thirds vote is needed. The Right to Life people did not receive a two-thirds vote." THE STATE Supreme Court settled the issue last July in favor of PCC. The court stated that the law could not be put into effect until April 1, 90 days after the end of the legislative session, Henry said. Since the court ruling, PCC, an organization representing many Pro- Choice groups in Michigan, have canvassed at the University and around the state for signatures. Henry said signatures must be submitted by February 15, allowing six weeks for validating signatures and to prevent a gap between April and November where state-funded abortions would be cut. If PCC receives enough signatures, Medicaid for abortions will be extended until the November election. "The Right to Life people are going to go through (the signatures) with a fine toothed comb," Henry said. Henry believes PCC will easily get the 40,000 more signatures needed. Last February, members of the Right to Life movement doubled the required amount of signatures. DEBBIE MATZO, president of the University's Right to Life group, said she is confident that Michigan residents will vote for the ban of -state-funded abortions if it reaches the ballot in November. "We're waiting it out," Matzo said. "If it goes to vote, I think we will win." Matzo, a graduate student, said 300 students belong to the Right to Life group on campus. "We don't think the state of Michigan has any right killing babies before they are born," said Pat Rose, former chair of the Washtenaw County Right to Life. "ABORTION KILLS an innocent baby," Rose said. "(Babies) have been excluded from the Constitution. The Declaration of Independence says all men are created - created equal," Rose said. The U.S. Supreme Court declared abortion legal with the Roe v. Wade case in 1973. In 1976 the Hyde Amendment cut federally funded abortions, and left the decision of funding up to individual states. Twenty-one states fund abortions through Medicaid. Frozen head needs body RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) - When a cryonics company froze Dora Kent's head last month, it was with the hope that the 83-year-old woman could someday be revived and live in a new body without the disease that plagued her first life. Cryonics is the freezing of the dead in hopes that technology will someday advance to the point that the bodies can be revived - a prac- tice scoffed at by most medical au- thorities. Six members of the company which severed Kent's head were ar- rested recently during an investiga- tion into her treatment. Now Leasing for Fall '88 All apartments convenient to campus Evening and Saturday Hours Forest Terrace, Ann Arbor The Lion, Ann Arbor The Abbey, Ann Arbor Carriage House, Ann Arbor Arbor Forest, Ann Arbor Park Plaza, Ann Arbor Albert Terrace, Ann Arbor And others... (313) 761-1523 543 Church Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 II SYMPOSIUM ON THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Crowd members cheer as police officer killed DALLAS (AP) - A man seized "The officer was saying a police officer's gun and fatally shot shoot me. I'll help you wh the officer in th8 face. As the officer way I can.' But the guy shot pleaded for his life, some spectators the head," one witness reporte yelled "Shoot him!," authorities Another witness said that said. in the crowd were savino. 'Don't ,atever him in d. people "Shoot Campus Cinema Festival of Animation Mich., 7 p.m. A collection of the world's finest animation shorts. Repo. Man (Alex Cox, 1984) Mich., 9 p.m. Cult favorite with Emilio Estevez and Harry Dean Stanton. It's got punks and hot cars and martians and punks. Speakers Salman Sadeh - "Molecular Recognition and Design o f Molecular Receptors." Rm 1200, Chemistry Building at 4:00 p.m. Avi Hadari - "Israel's Culture and Politics as Reflected in its Popular Music." Pond Room of the Michigan Union, at 7:30 p.m. "Actuarial Positions (fulltime and summer) Information Session/Reception," sponsored by Career Planning & Placement, Kuenzel Room' of the Michigan Union, at 7:00 p.m. Erwin Tschirner - "The 'Natural Approach' to Teaching Auditions - for "The Lesson" by Eugene Ionesco, at 7:00 p.m. Call Hillel (663-3336) f'o r appointment. U of M A-Squares- Free dancing and dance lessons at the Michigan Union at 8:30 p.m. Baha'is Fireside - 6 1 1 Catherine # 1, call 995-8735 for info. Public Relations Club - Mass meeting, Wolverine Room of the Michigan Union, at 7:00 p.m. Rugby Football Club - Recruiting, Room 2230 CCRB, at 7:00 p.m. "Say No to Nicotine" - helps kick the habit, contact the Health Promotion and Community Relations Department, 763-1320. Furthermore Black Theater in America - Symposium, at Rackham Amphitheater, 8:15 p.m. Joe Ely - at the Blind Pig, 10:00 p.m. University Symphony " Andr6 De Shields actor, director and choreographer " Lonette McKee actress and singer *Oyamo playwright Public Reception Following Symposium BLACK THEATRE IN AMERICA Officer John Chase, 25, who last month switched from an evening to a day shift to spend more time with his bride of three months, was at- tacked Saturday while writing a traf- fic ticket. Chase, a 2 1/2 year vet- eran of the police force, had received three commendations. The . suspect, Carl Dudley Williams, 34, was shot by off-duty officers who responded to the call. The man died a few hours later, po- lice reported. A crowd of about 30 people gathered around the officer and his assailant, a homeless man with a history of mental illness, according to police and witnesses. him! Shoot him again," police re- ported. Witnesses said the attacker then strolled down the street, dangling the gun from his hand. Investigators said they knew of no motive for the shooting. Williams had a criminal record dating to 1978 with an arrest in Au- gust for assault on a police officer, authorities said. 8:15 p.m. Sponsored by The institute for the Humanities . I The Universityof Michigan T4ffice of 1i ncial Aid 2011 Student Activities Building Winter 1988 GSL Application FINAL DATE KINKO'S HAS 3-RING BINDERS 1"-$1.59 If you need a Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL) for Winter term, all I