.4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 21, 1988 Speech criticizes portrayal of Africa BY KELLY GAFFORD Most Americans see Africans as maleducated, cursed people who live in adverse conditions, Dr. Mutombo. Mpanyna told about 20 people during a lunchtime lecture at the International Center yesterday. "Why can't the American people depict Africa as as a little struggling guy trying to make it?" he asked. Mpanya presented data during the speech showing how the U.S. media prints only nega- tive information about Africa. "Last year, 50 percent of all newspaper headlines were about South Africa and Apartheid," he said. "Twenty- five percent were on Angolia and Mozambique, and 90 percent were on violence, corruption, and warfare that existed in Africa. AIDS came in a strong second." Africa has a poor self-image because the media accentuates negative, and sometimes unrealistic aspects of the culture, he said. For example, the movie Coming to America portrays African people as rich tribal kings and queens served by slaves who do everything from washing their bodies to throwing rose petals in their path be- fore walking. Nicole Martin, an LSA sophomore who at- tended yesterday's luncheon, agreed with Mpanya. "We (Blacks) don't feel good about ourselves be- cause the media portrays Africa and other Black- oriented things as negative," she said. Mpanya, a native of Zaire, worked for the Kellogg Institute for International Studies at Notre Dame University, and has a doctorate in Regional and Urban Planning from the Univer- sity. He now works part-time for the Ecumenical Center, which co-sponsored the event with St. Nicholas Orthodox Church. Mpanya ended his talk by urging his listeners to critically challenge the information that is presented by the media. In doing so, Americans will be taking the first step toward changing their misperceptions of African life and culture, he said. 'U' official to serve on federal med. panel) BY ED KRACHMER Vice Provost for Medical Affairs George Zuidema will soon be ap- pointed to the federal Council on Graduate Medical Education, Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Plymouth) said. Zuidema, who came to the Uni- versity in 1984 after serving as Chief of Surgery at Johns Hopkins University, learned of his future ap- pdintment to the 17-member council on Friday. Pursell nominated him, but he will be officially appointed this month by U.S. Health and Hu- man Services Secretary Otis Bowen. - Zuidema's four-year, non-salaried term will start Oct. 1 and will end Sept. 30, 1992. "I'll take a viewpoint that really includes a look at the particular set of problems addressed by the council from a standpoint as a university as a whole, from the Medical School as a trainer of physicians, and as an administrator looking at the financial side of the issues," Zuidema said. . FORMED IN 1986, the council is charged with advising Bowen on federal policies regarding the number of physicians in the U.S., where they are located, current and future physician specialty shortages, and issues relating to foreign medical graduates. The council is chaired by Univer- sity of Minnesota Vice Provost for Health Affairs Neal Vanselow, a former University Medical School faculty member. Zuidema, in addition to oversee- ing the medical center, chaired a staffing study for the American Col- lege of Surgeons from 1970 to 1975, and was a panelist for the De- partment of Health and Human Ser- vices in the late 1970s. " G I V E N Dr. Zuidema's outstanding credentials and background, he will add insight and expertise into the council deliberations," said Gary Cates, an aide to Pursell. Some of the big problems, Zuidema said, "are how to find funds for graduate education and residency training of physicians... It's likely to be an even greater problem as there are attempts to decrease the Medicare budget even more." Of the 17 members of the coun- cil, Zuidema will be among eight physicians. The Council meets three to four times per year in Washing- ton, D.C. Project Continued from Page 1 lot of gall to say that you, the consumer, who's paying a lot of bucks, have to do something," Howard said. The federal Democratic Leadership Council has considered requiring public service for financial aid. Their program, called the Citizen Corps, would offer tuition compensation for volunteering in various community. service organizations. Programs like Citizen Corps would encourage public service, but maybe for the wrong reason, he said. "When you make public service a requirement, it becomes not service but servitude," he said. The last official day to enroll in Project Community was Sept. 16, but as long as students obtain an override before their section's first seminar meets this week, there are spaces open in most sections. DASI ATTAM : The Ritual Repertoire of the Devadasis of South India A Lecture/Demonstration by Saskia C. Kersenboom Thursday, September 22, 1988 8:00 p.m. The University of Michigan Museum of Art Corner of South State Street and South University Sponsored by the Institute for the Humanities r". S J 4 Z e I.PV A 1 1 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Fire forces 500 to evacuate VACAVILLE, Calif. - Anxious firefighters watched the winds yesterday as they worked to create a blackened dirt barrier to hold a 4-day- old arson fire at a road outside city limits. Firefighters ordered the evacuation of 500 people along a 10-mile stretch of Pleasants Valley Road, just west of city limits, fearing that afternoon winds could fan the blaze toward scattered homes near the road. But they expressed optimism that the fire would not go into the town itself. The Miller fire, named for the canyon in which it began, has burned 20,000 acres since it started Saturday. Seven homes were destroyed Sunday. It is one of two major California blazes that have destroyed 31 homes and aout 28,000 acres of wildland, brush and timber since the weekend. Elsewhere across the West, however, the situation was improved as the worst summer for fires in three decades wound to a close. In all, nearly 70,000 fires have been tallied, blacking more than 4.1 million acres, 'about half of them in Alaska. Dukakis pushes insurance UNDATED - Democrat Michael Dukakis proposed a broad health insurance program for American workers yesterday and told Republican rival George Bush "it's about time you came out from behind that flag" and addressed the issue. Bush draped himself in patriotism, visiting the nation's largest flag manufacturer. Dukakis, seeking support from working people, said the federal government should enact legislation requiring most employers to provide basic health insurance benefits for employees and dependents. "I think it's time we did something," said Dukakis. He said he wanted' to extend health insurance to all Americans, and that the first step would be to provide it to working people through their employers. Campaign aides said the first phase of Dukakis' program would give benefits to about 22 million people who have none, leaving 15 million or more Americans still awaiting protection under a national health insurance plan. Flight attendant testifies against TWA terrorist FRANKFURT, West Germany - A U.S. Navy diver "never made a sound" as he bravely endured savage beatings by the hijackers of a TWA jetliner, flight attendant Uli Derickson testified yesterday. Derickson said Mohammed Ali Hamadi, on trail for air piracy and the murder of Navy diver Robert Stethem, also threatened to blow up the airplane. The German-born woman, now a naturalized U.S. citizen and the subject of a U.S. television movie earlier this year, said Hamadi held a gun to her head shortly after the Athens to Rome flight took off on June 14, 1985. But in the most emotional testimony of the trial, the 44-year-old Derickson described the suffering endured by Stethem. The hijackers "took him up to the cockpit and started to brutally beat him. They beat on him as long as he stood," Derickson told the court. Haitian soldiers oust officers PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - Soldiers from six units ousted their commanders as a revolt spread through the military yesterday, as the new president appointed a military chief and appealed for an end to the unrest. Lt. Gen. Prosper Avril, who declared himself president early Sunday following a coup, said Haiti's military government was taking steps to satisfy "the most urgent demands of the members of the armed forces." But reports of reprisal killings, demonstrations and a rash of military mutinies continued to grow. Radio stations said gunners killed four people in apparent reprisal for the Sept. 11 massacre of 13 people during a Mass at a Roman Catholic church and other atrocities linked to the government of the deposed presi- dent, Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy. EXTRAS Mausoleum marriage, or another wild wedding FLINT -- To paraphrase an old saying: Bettei wed than dead - particularly in that mausoleum. That's where a Flint couple began their married life, because the bride said such a structure represents the loving qualities of her new marriage. "It's a sanctuary, a place of love and a place of memories," said Gwen Lynk, the bride and a sales counselor at Flint Memorial Park. "And we (employees and owners of the cemetery) all treat each other like family here, and it was nice to be among family." Lynk and Steven Schultz were married Sunday in the building, which has skylights and stained glass windows, amid balloons, streamers, floral arrangements, and tombs. Some of the preceremony guests were people who came to visit crypts, unaware of the wedding. "They were favorably impressed that we were going to be married in that setting," Lynk said. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: January through April - $15 in Ann Arbor, $22 outside the city. 1988 spring, summer, and fall term rates not yet available. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the National Student News Service. l45 e S G k I O -, . ': G ommmommi _ _ __ _ Save Big Bucks on a Personal Computer! 21-. fstudients, facufty, and staff can take advantage of 41 % - 58% off retailprices on Apple, FBM, andiZenith persona/computers through 'I-Ms Computer 'KickoffSafe. 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