The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, February 8, 1989 - Page 5 Meeting guides future doctors BY MICAH SCHMIT Many women simply opt not to become medical doctors, because pursuing the lifetime challenge of a areer in medicine, battling the so- cial impediments imposed on mi- norities, and trying to bear and raise children can be discouraging prospects. Five female University Medical School students gathered in a small conference room at the .Michigan League yesterday afternoon and shared their views on being a woman in medical school with an enthusiastic crowd of 25 women. The panelists - Susan Fabrik, Kristin Mogbo, Petra Polasek, Jen- nie Mao, and Paula Mossner, all second year students - described their different histories in reaching medical school. Fabnk and Mogbo, who are now both in their 30's, said they have taken the "non-traditional" route - "floundering" for several years in and out of school and jobs, before decid- ing to commit to careers in medicine. Mogbo, who has three children from six to 19 years old, said there is not enough flexibility for women with children. She attributes this in part to the "very predominant" num- ber of white males in the Univer- sity's Medical School faculty. "The system is not set up to help you find alternatives, for example, if I have a sick child," she said, adding that she is splitting up her second year so she can afford more time with her family. This typifies a trend in medicine today, Fabrik said. The less demand- ing primary care fields - such as pediatrics and family practice - tend to attract women who need to devote * time to their families. "You are less able to have a family as a surgeon," she said. See Medical Page 6 Group tells students t-o LINDSAY MORRIS/Daily Snow sculptures Preparations for the 1989 Michigan Snow Sculpting Competition, to be held on Main Street beginning Thursday at 1:00 pm. There will be 24 competing teams judged on creativity, technique, and message. BALSA presents videotape on Malcolm X's views avoid BY ANDREW KAPLAN A new student group has orga- nized to encourage students not to attend the University. Students for a New Michigan Image will release 5,000 flyers every month "portraying the University of Michigan as it truly is... until the regents and administration rescind their anti-student actions of the past few months." The group's first flyer mentions recent University actions, such as passing what many call a student "code" of non-academic conduct, im- plementing a student protest policy, and deputizing two public safety of- ficers. Threatening to "remind the Uni- versity administration that students are not powerless and cannot be taken for granted," SNMI said it will circulate these fliers on other college and high school campuses. According to fifth-year graduate student Henry Park, SNMI's spokesperson, "The group name and the formation of the group is meant as a long-term threat to the image of the University. But if the administration acts quickly, it won't be." University President James Dud- erstadt declined comment on the publication. Shirley Clarkson, Duderstadt's assistant, said she hasn't seen the publication and could not respond. "Usually we don't respond to nega- tive comment." she said. Vice President Henry Johnson would not comment on the publica- tion's content, adding that the publication would have little effect. "I would hope that students and par- ents could see beyond the incidents they're citing and realize that the University is a place for learning and experiencing good things," he said. "I don't think it will be taken seri- ously." Student reactions to the flier var- ied. LSA junior Andrew Shaver said, "People will come here because of 'U, the reputation Michigan has already. Only the activist types will take this seriously and their absence won't be missed by the administration and Michigan will become more conser- vative as a result." Third-year pharmacy student Sue Felk thought differently: "I think this publication may attract more' activists to this campus because. they'll see how active student orga- nizations at Michigan presently are. Because you're an activist you want to go somewhere where you can be one." Business School senior Lou Petruco said he opposed SNMI's ac- tions. "I think it's a joke," he said. "It's hard to take seriously that these people who write this paper will ac- tually influence anyone's decision to go to college here or that their' voices have value to those trying to get into this school. I think U of M is a great school. These isolated in-, cidents say little about the school as' it actually is." Park said copies of the paper have' already been distributed to the media; area high schools, and other col- leges. The SNMI has also circulated a' petition in support of four students who were arrested for their actions' during a protest of Duderstadt's in- auguration in November. The protesters, who will stand trial on' May 11, have alleged that they were brutalized by police and University public safety officers. The flyer is a privately funded four-page newsletter. The most re-, cent issue's headlines say, "Duderstadt should not be president,"{ "U Police Curtail Student Rights," "University Arrests Students for Protest" and "Michigan? Just say no." Park refused to reveal the names; of students involved in SNMI be-' cause of possible University action against them. The next flyer will be printed at the end of this month. BY LAURA COHN Malcolm X, the Black civil rights leader who died from an assassin's bullet in 1965, spoke to 50 students last night in Mary Markley's Angela Davis Lounge last night. A videotaped documentary organized by University law student Charles Wynder showed Malcolm X saying, "The injustice imposed on the Negroes in this country by Uncle Sam is criminal." The video kicked off a series of events to end the celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day and start the celebration of the ideas of Malcolm X, according to Wynder. Speaking prior to the presentation, Wynder expressed concern about discrimination at universities today as he cited figures from the New York Times, which said the Black male enrollment in colleges in the United States has been decreasing since it went down 30 percent from 1980 to 1986. "We must learn not to separate ourselves from the issues at hand. Someone has to put that foot out, but if we stick together things will happen. If we stand together, it's going to take more than a nation to stop us," said Wynder. Wynder expressed concern about the University's recent Diversity Day, and said the day was "not really what the holiday is supposed to be about." The documentary quoted King as saying Malcolm X's assassination was an "unfortunate tragedy." James Dixon, a first-year student who attended the program, said, "Blacks have a low self-esteem as it is. We should try to educate ourselves. We as Blacks at this university are here for one purpose, to educate ourselves and to take it back to the community." Malcolm X was a Black militant leader who articulated concepts of racial pride and Black nationalism in the early 60s. After his assassination on February 21, 1965, the widespread distribution of his autobiography, The Autobiography of Malcolm X. made him an ideological hero, especially among Black youth. Growing up in Lansing, he saw his house burn down at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan. In 1946, inI prison for burglary, he was converted to the Black Muslim faith. Since Malcom X advocated violence for self protection and appeared to many to be a fanatic, his leadership was rejected by many civil rights leaders who emphasized nonviolence resistance to racial injustice. Announcing a 2-day "Rush-ia" for the r Osipov Balalaika Orchestra nn ,0