Asian students call * for more support BY VERA SONGWE Asian American students called upon the University for more support to implement a comprehensive Asian studies program and to end stereo- typing at a meeting with admin- istration officals and faculty last *,Friday. The annual meeting - organized to unite and voice concerns of Asian American students on campus - was part of this month's Asian American Awareness month. President James Duderstadt and Vice President for Minority Affairs Charles Moody, among other faculty and staff, were present.. Students requested a comprehen- 'sive Asian studies program instead of one class that lumps all Asian cul- ture into one class. "The University has got to make a commitment to diversity," said Harkmore Lee, president of the Korean Students Association. "If we want to compete with other univer- sities, we certainly should consider instituting a comprehensive program in Asian studies at the university." Thomas Lee, an LSA junior, said, "I don't think it does justice to the culture, to each culture to group things together and try to study them at the same time. I would like to see classes offered in Korean, Japanese, and Chinese histories and cultures." Presently there are 2,000 Asian American students and 300 faculty and staff on campus, said Ron Ara- maki, the Asian American Represen- tative at Minority Student Services. Aramaki, who is leaving his position as representative, said Asian American students need to be pro- vided with role models. During the seven years Aramaki has been at the .University, he has seen increasing activism by Asian American students. "Students were not unified or working together be- fore. The growth is so incredible. When I came here, there was very little going on," he said. Asians students have been sin- gled as "model minority students and the University does not think they need support," said Pam Motoike, a counselor at University counseling services. "It is important for all Asian American students to realize that their goals are common... people don't take time out to distinguish whether you are Korean or Chinese. You all fall into the same stereo- types," said Aramaki. He said stereotypes - positive or negative - are detrimental and should not be condoned. He said he' would like to see Asian American students organize more activities to achieve their goals. "I think for people to be really educated and ready for the 21st cen- tury. People have to know about the way the world operates," Moody said. "People have to make a decision whether they want to work with a new set of actors on the scene." Gross National Product Percentchage fro")rne ~ uJarter at Afkib )J ra .~te 2% o -t - - 19Q7 - - *19 ~ Soc* us 04%d ot & c-m-niv AP The U.S. gross national product grew at a rate of two percent for the fourth quarter of 1988, the slow- est quarterly growth in two years, the government re- ported. For all of 1988, the economy grew at a rate of 3.8 percent, the best per- formance in four years. need would shift the balance of power," Burchfield said. This would make the resources the United States gets from these countries more ex- pensive, and harder to obtain. "There's a lot of rhetoric about helping people who are on the lowest rung on the ladder," Burchfield said. He thinks the Peace Corps appears to help - the only way for the people of these developing countries to move is up. Yet, the Peace Corps does not aim to change their situa- tion enough to really give the help that is needed, he said. "Peace Corps is fundamentally an extension of U.S. foreign policy," Burchfield said, "as long as U.S. for- eign policy is corrupt, the Peace Corps will be," he said. The Michigan Daily - Monda January 30, 1989 - Page 3 Speaker stresses Israeli viewpoint at conference BY GIL RENBERG Students should speak out and ed- ucate others about Israel's side of the Israel-Palestinian conflict to counter the publicity that the Palestinian cause has received, said John Roth- mann, a keynote speaker in this weekend's Israel Action Conference. The conference, sponsored by Tagar, an international organization made up of pro-Israel student ac- tivists, drew 60 members from eight Midwestern universities. Rothmann, a Zionist activist, was an aide to President Nixon while in his early twenties and is currently a foreign policy consultant on the Is- rael-Palestinian conflict. Support for Israel among young Jews has weakened because many are unaware of the issues involved in the conflict and are unable to success- fully confront people who criticize Israel, he said. He also said that just as most young Jews feel proud when Israel impresses the world - as it did by winning the Six-Day War or staging the rescue attempt in Entebbe - they feel ashamed when Israel does something they think is immoral, such as shooting Palestinian child- ren. Attitudes then change from "We" to "Them," he said. "Yasir Arafat and the P.L.O. haven't changed," he warned the audience. He said Arafat's recent ac- ceptance of Israel's right to exist was not entirely sincere, since the lan- guage used was deceiving. He also accused Arafat of stationing an army of 2,000 P.L.O. guerillas on the northern border of Israel in the past two weeks. Rothmann said the Palestinians already have a homeland in Jordan, whose population is 65 percent Palestinian. He criticized those who believe that Israel is the only home- land for Palestinians, and that there- fore Israel is an illegitimate country. "Palestinians have rights. Israel recognizes those rights. But Pales- tinian national rights cannot be gained at the expense of Israel's right to exist," he said. Rothmann stressed the importance of Israel as a destination for Jews around the world who are fleeing qp- pression and as the United States' only democratic ally in the Middle East. He also warned that President George Bush will not be as strong a friend of Israel as President Ronald Reagan was. He praised Reagan for being a firm supporter of the state of Israel. "Ronald Reagan was the best friend that Israel has had in the White House since Harry Truman and Richard Nixon," he said. "George Bush is not Ronald Ra- gan," he said. "George Bush does not have that sa'me visceral feeling about Israel." In the past eight years Bush occa- sionally took stands against Israel's interests; however, he also supported Israel many times, said Rothmann, V ice-President Dan Quayle is as committed to Israel as President Reagan, and has frequently stood up for Israel in the Senate, said Roth- mann. LSA senior Keith Hope, president of the Ann Arbor chapter of Tagar, said "Tagar was brought into being to support the Israeli government... to create a positive image of Israel" "We support the Israeli gover- ment, whether it's Likud [the right- wing party] or Labor [in power],"he said. Although most of the members of the Ann Arbor chapter support Likud, Hope said, "The group .. should not be defined as a right-wing group, but rather as a pro-Israel group." The conference was a success, Hope said. "I think the people feel really motivated after the conference." at' a I CPeace Continued from Page 1 participate in the Peace Corps, Bald- win said. "I've never seen any evi- dence to prove such accusations," she said. "I don't know if the CIA is in- *volved," said Jim Burchfield, director of the International Forestry Seminar Program at the University. He feels that even if the CIA is involved, no "one would admit it. Burchfield was a Peace Corps volunteer in Guatemala from 1973 to 1977, and refers to this as the "most expansive period of my life." He says the personal contact in the Peace Corps is invaluable and something he "wouldn't trade for anything." Burchfield said the CIA has "very little accountability" and has developed into "a secret government." For these reasons, he feels the CIA does not need to hide behind the Peace Corps. However, he said CIA agents often use the title of Peace Corps volunteer when necessary - as an unofficial cover. Burchfield said the Peace Corps representatives, like Louise Baldwin, sincerely believe that the CIA is not linked to the Peace Corps. If there is a connection between the CIA and Peace Corps, Burchfield said, then only those at the top of the Peace Corps chain of command know about it. If this is the case, the only way to change the situation is to "close -down the CIA," said Burchfield. But it's not the CIA that Burch- field feels is the problem with the Peace Corps - the real problem, he said, is that the Peace Corps helps uphold what he sees as unjust U.S. foreign policies, and therefore keeps people oppressed. "The programs are designed to not present any challenge to their status quo," Burchfield said. "The U.S. doesn't want to change this situation. It's beneficial to the U.S.... We get cheap resources." Burchfield said that "ultimately the Peace Corps has not been directed to make substantial change." He thinks the United States tries to ap- pear as if it is helping through pro- grams such as the Peace Corps, but the United States has no intention of allowing these countries enough power to become self-sufficient. "To give these people what they Army may buy base for major operations } WASHINGTON (AP) - As Congress ponders a recommendation " to close 86 smaller military facili- ties, the Army is preparing to buy 200,000 acres adjacent to its main training area to accommodate modern tanks, planes,and electronic gear that need more room for large scale ma- neuvers. Army officials say they need $29 million to expand the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, next to Death Valley in California. By comparison, the Base Alignments and Closing Commission has said $693 million can be saved annually by shutting the facilities it recom- mended. Outgoing Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci has already sent the commission's recommendations on base closings to Congress, which take effect unless blocked by both house. Senior lawmakers say rejec- tion of the package is unlikely. Likewise, Congress has not ob- jected to the Army's plans to buy 200,000 acres adjacent to the 632,000-acre Fort Irwin. The expansion conforms with the commissioner's expression of "acute concern about the recruitment of the Armed forces for adequate training areas." None of the bases recommended for closing were large enough for large-scale maneuvers, said Paul Johnson, deputy assistant Army secretary for installations and hous- ing. In addition to buying land at Fort Irwin, Johnson said, the Army is considering a 63,000-acre expansion of a training facility at Yakima, Wash. VETERAN USHERS- Those who have ushered Major Events concerts in the past. NEW USHERS- Those who would like to usher Major Events Concerts. t, Northwalk is available 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday through Thursday. Mike Twigg is the owner of the Peak Performance Center. A Daily photo 'caption incorrectly stated this information Friday. The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC THE LIST Mon.- Fri. Jan. 30- Feb. 3 Wed. Feb.1 What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers Guild House Writers Series - Lisa Poneck and David Pollack, Cre- ative Writing Program, Guild House, 8 pm. Refreshments. "Market Mechanisms and Workers' Self-Management: Experiences in Hungary and Yugoslavia" -- Dr. Catherine Samary, University of Paris, Rackham E. Conference Rm., 8 pm. "Solid State Chemistry of Electronic and Magnetic Mate- rials" - Chem. Prof. B.J. Evans, 1200 Chem., 4 pm. "The Hyksos and Their Capital at Avaris: New Light on An- cient Palestinerand Egypt in the Middle Bronze Age" - ners welcome. Contact Tim Frye, 662-8637. Beginning Microsoft Word (IBM PC and Compatibles) - 3001 SEB, 1-5 pm. Registration re- quired. Programmer's Seminar - 4212 SEB, 7-9 pm. Registration required. Beginning Microsoft Word Lecture/Demonstration (Mac's) - 4212 S EB, 7-8:30 pm. Registra- tion required. Pre-Interviews - EDS, 1200 EECS, 4:30-5:30 pm. Benefit Concert by RAM, Feb. 2 - At the Beat, doors open at 9 pm. Band starts at 10 pm. Featuring Big Box of Nines and The Iodine Rain- coats, $5 at the door. Piano Master Class--Ivan Moravec, with advanced U-M piano students. Recital Hall, 6:30 p.m. FREE Campus Orchestra/Arts Chorale Robert Debbaut and Jonathan Hirsh, conductors. Mozart Symphony No. 35 Angell The Death of Disco Schubert Mass in G, with soloists Katherine Gale, soprano Kenneth CHerry, tenor Timothy Jones, bass Hill, 8:00 p.m. FREE University Dance Company---Viva 4 w. 4 41 See Castles in the Air And learn your way around the world "If you have built castles in the air, now put the foundations under them." Henry David Thoreau Study in London for $4325 per semester. Includes air fare, resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. Study in Seville, Spain, for $3425 per semester. Includes resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. No foreign language Thurs.- Sun. Stravinsky I i