Activists object to violent toys LANSING (AP) - Parents should turn their backs to guns and other violent toys this Christmas and ;select educational toys for their children, a group of local residents said Tuesday. Majorie Kostelnik, associate pro- fessor of family and child ecology at Michigan State University, said guns bazookas and battleships teach chil- dren to fight, rather than to get along with each other and solve problems through negotiation. "If children are learning the lan- guage of violence, if children are learning the way you solve problems is through physical force, if children learn that the way we have social interaction with other human beings is by pretending to hurt them, we can't be too surprised if that is what children are playing out,"she said. Dr, Stephen Gurten, director of pediatric intensive care at Sparrow Hospital in Lansing and spokesper- son for Physicians for Social Responsibility, said violent play leads to an epidemic of "children killing children." Gunshot wounds are the leading cause of death among young men, but are now a major cause of death among teen-agers as well, he said, adding the age group may move lower in the future. foNancy Leiserwitz, spokesperson for Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament, said war toys teach children xenophobia, sexism and makes reductions in real weapons less likely. "We think it it unconscionable that in a world in which there are over 50,000 nuclear weapons, the toy companies would choose this par- ticular time to teach a whole gen- eration of children war-making and the love of war and even give them battle plans for waging global nuclear and chemical war, all in the name of fun for the kids and profits for the toy industry," she said . The groups urged parents to write to Michigan stores and urge them to stock more non-violent toys. Stu- dents for Social Responsibility also plans to stage a promotional picket outside stores that sell educational toys, spokesperson James Wheeler said. In Washington yesterday, the Consumer Product Safety Commis- sion defended its efforts to rid the market of toys that can be dangerous to children. The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 23, 1988 - Page 3 Committee OKs cameras in court Get your Rose Bowl goodies ROBINLOZNAK/Daily ,Gary Lee Hampton, of Tampa, Florida, sells Rose Bowl paraphernalia on the corner of Packard and Stadium yesterday. He said Michigan fans apparently aren't excited about the Rose Bowl, because last year, when he sold in East Lansing, Spartan fans bought five times as many souvenirs. SANE/Freeze collects food LANSING (AP) - Journalists should be allowed to use cameras and tape recorders in the courtrooms of all 83 Michigan counties, a commit- tee of the Michigan Supreme Court recommended yesterday. The Cameras in the Courtroom Committee voted 9-1to ask the high court to make permanent an experi- ment that has been operating in five Michigan counties since June. "The public has a right to know and the public's right to know is fulfilled only in part by the newspa pers. ..We feel that this would open the coverage of court matters to the general public," said Michigan Court of Appeals Judge Joseph Sullivan, chair of the committee. Sullivan noted that when the ex- periment began some feared court- rooms would be disturbed. "Actually, in the workings of it things have gone rather calmly and smoothly," he said. The high court began its experi- ment statewide on Feb.l but permit- ted defense attorneys, prosecutors or judges to block the use of cameras or, tape recorders if they didn't want them. Only 63 of the 174 requests for the expanded media coverage were approved under those guidelines, ac- cording to a report presented to the committee. On June 20, the-court changed the guidelines in five counties, making access to courtrooms automatic un- less a judge determined that such coverage would make the trial or court proceeding unfair. Of the 144 requests received in Grand Traverse, Ingham, Marquette, Oakland, and Wexford counties, 138 were approved the report said. Sullivan said comments from judges involved in those cases turned up few problems. The lone dissenter on the committee was Detroit Recorders' Court Judge Vera Jones, who argued that the use of cameras and tape recorders should remain an experi- ment for another year but be ex- panded statewide. Jones said that the five-county experiment did not provide enough experience with the type of violent felony cases heard in Detroit Recorders' Court. "It's the kind of thing most papers want to get a hold of and sell pa- pers," she said. But Sullivan said ample evidence existed in other states that cameras in the courtrooms don't disrupt pro- ceedings in those types of cases. He noted that only six states don't allow any type of expanded media coverage. During the five-county experi- ment, news organizations wanting to use television or still use cameras had to request permission from the judge three days in advance, but the judge could approve a request that came in later. A judge's decision to terminate, suspend or ban the coverage could not be appealed under the experiment. The committee recommended those guidelines be continued, but suggested the guidelines spell out that judges are free to exclude cover- age of certain eyewitnesses, such as victims of sex crimes and their fami- lies, police informants, undercover agents and relocated witnesses. Coverage of jurors was already excluded. BY NOREEN HANLON Winter, always especially harsh on the homeless, will be a bit more bearable this year, thanks to the ef- forts of Michigan SANE/Freeze. Fifteen members of the local peace activist group endured inclement weather Sunday for their third annual food and clothing drive. Although there were fewer volunteers this year due to the cold rain, SANE/Freeze Senior Field Manager Tom Morse said the results were comparable to previ- ous drives. One SANE/Freeze official estimated that about 50 winter coats, 50 pairs of pants, 60 sweaters, and 200 pounds of food were collected, which should directly help about 100 of Ann Arbor's homeless people. "We got a bunch of food and winter coats that we wouldn't normally get" thanks to SANE/Freeze, said Laurie Wonnell, emergency food services coordinator of the S.O.S. Community Center. Other recipients of the food and clothing include the Bryant Community Center, the Second Baptist Church, S.A.F.E. House, and Ozone House. Volunteers canvassed the Stadium and Scio Church Road area and found that people were "mostly very re- sponsive," Morse said. He added that SANE/Freeze chose not to canvass in student housing areas because "students don't have as much in their closets as estab- lished residents." In addition to collecting food and clothing, SANE/Freeze hoped to teach Ann Arbor residents about the correlation between high military spending and increasing poverty. To convey this message sim- ply and quickly, SANE/Freeze distributed a flier with the picture of a young girl in the shadow of a mush- room cloud and a quote from former president Dwight Eisenhower. "Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, who are cold and are not clothed," the flier read. Despite their liberal political orientation and the current prevailing conservative attitude in the United States, Morse said that SANE/Freeze volunteers did not encounter any open hostility. "Even people who voted for Bush are still attuned to the needs of the homeless," he said. SANE/Freeze has been in Ann Arbor since 1983 and its national lobbying group was founded in 1957. School of Ed. course teaches how to teach BY ELIZABETH ROBBOY AND NICOLE SHAW Teaching real live high school students - from the preppies to the geeks to the freaks - is a world away from most School of Educa- tion courses. Most courses focus on a single aspect of teaching, but "real life" teachers must draw on many aspects at once. In 1974, English Prof. Alan Howes decided to do something about this disparity. Working with the School of Education, he created a one-semester course that would teach students how to teach high school, while fulfilling a number of re- quirements for teaching certification. "The regular program is divorced from the reality of what high school is really like," said Janis Haapapuro, an LSA senior. Most University ed- ucation classes are taught by profes- sors who have not taught high school for more than 20 years, she said. Class tries to recreate high school setting For an entire semester, a group of 33 students, two professors, and three teaching assistants meet 12 hours a week for Professional Semester, a course that combines practical aspects of teaching with theory. The program covers tutoring, classroom observation, teaching methods, and a senior seminar. Anne Gere, one of two professors for the course, claims that unlike the regular program, the Professional Semester enables students to make connections between the different components of teaching and litera- ture. "It's a perfect package in a convenient form" that combines the School of Education's and LSA En- glish department's requirements for teaching certification, Haapapuro said. Both students and professors said they benefit from the interdisci- plinary approach to teaching, as well as the close relationships that have developed within the group. The students are close to one another, so they are better able to critique each other's performance honestly. Trish Nelson, an LSA senior, said the people in the program are "like one big family - you get to know people so well that you say what you really think." The students say they form close relationships with their professors, and the everyday contact and egalitarian atmosphere encourages the professors to share their own ex- periences in the real world of teach- ing. Students also laud the program for providing flexibility in assign- ments, practical experience, a high student-faculty ratio, and the freedom to explore areas that interest them. Despite widespread enthusiasm for the program, however, some students think it is too idealistic. Haapapuro, for example, said many of the topics discussed in the Senior Seminar would not be taught in a high school classroom - often be- cause they are too controversial. Haapapuro also said many of the potential teacher-school board and student-teacher conflicts are glossed over. The future teachers don't learn "what will happen when the unions strike" or what to do when "the kid in the back of the classroom won't be quiet," she said. Applications for next year's Pro- fessional Semester are due in late March. Out of last year's applicant pool of about 40 students, 33 were accepted. Overall, faculty and student re- sponse to the program has been ex- tremely positive. Nelson said the. program has helped her to better un- derstand herself and develop a teach- ing style. "I recommend it highly," she said. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 UM News in The Daily 764-0b-" THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers "Recent Progress in the Asymmetric Synthesis of Amino Acids" - Chem. Dept. E. Swayze, 1300 Chem. Bldg., 4 pm. "Towards an Understanding of the L5/S1 Motion Component in Manual Materials Handling" - WS Marras, 241 IOE Bldg., 4 pm. Meetings Stylagi Air Corps/Science Fiction Club - Michigan League, 8:15 pm. International Affairs Commit- tee - International Center, 7:30 pm. U of M Asian Student Coali- tion - 2439 Mason Hall, 7 pm. World Hunger Education-Ac- tion Committee - 4202 Michigan Union, 6 pm. U of M Taekwondo Club - 2275 CCRB, 6:30-8:15 pm. LASC Weekly Meeting - 2435 Mason Hall, 8 pm. Will discuss "We Proudly Share the Noble Dreams of Martin and Malcolm". Furthermore University Lutheran Chapel - "Holden Village Vespers", 9 pm. 1511 Washtenaw Ave. The Clay Gallery - A wide vari- ety of ceramic pieces suitable for holi- day gifts, 8 Nickels Arcade, 9:30 am- 5:30 pm. German Club Happy Hour-Fri- day,Nov. 25 - U-Club, 5 pm. Women's Tea-Friday, Nov. 25 - Women's Crisis Center, 5:30-7 pm. Guild House - Faculty Brown Bag Lunch, 12 noon; Beans and Rice Din- ner, 6 pm. Performances The BEAT Presents - "The Folkminers", 10:30 pm. $3 charge. "Vampire Lesbians of Sodom & Sleeping Beauty or Coma" - Performance Network, Friday, Nov. 25 and Saturday, Nov. 26: 11 pm. Sunday, Nov. 27: 9 pm. $8 General Admission/$6 Students & Seniors. "Mars Needs Women"-Sunday, Nov. 27 - Hot Rockabilly and Party Band, Rick's American Cafe, 9 pm. Organ Music of Messiaen-Sun- Mideast Continued from Page 1 fighting an oppressive government for the human rights Palestinians are denied. Endelman, however, said the PLO has been portrayed accurately in the U.S. media. "I don't think the PLO has received particularly bad coverage; a lot of it has been quite favorable lately." Tanter agreed: "The media has fairly portrayed the PLO as a terrorist organization and as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people." Wald said focusing on PLO terrorism detracts attention from the "power responsible for the violence in Israel and occupied territories, which is the state of Israel," and not the PLO. He said an indigenous population can always be expected to react against tyrannical policies of a particular state, and that it is invalid to call these actions "terrorist." The PLO is an example of a population revolting against oppression, he added, and it is "state sponsored terrorism that we should be more concerned with." Several other University pro- fessors questioned about the PLO resolution said they would rather not comment on the matter. if WHAT'S HAPPENING JUST A SHORT WALK FROM CENTRAL CAMPUS RECREATIONAL SPORTS 'THANKSGIVING HOL IDA Y HOURS CAC; RB _ NCRB IMSB 2A. " wA - . . . --. . I