ACLU to challenge abortion a statute LANSING (AP) - The American Civil Liberties Union will go to court on behalf of a 15- year- old girl rape survivor and try to overturn a ban on state- funded abortions for poor women, the head of the Michigan ACLU said yesterday. Howard Simon, executive director of the state ACLU, said the Detroit girl became pregnant as a result of a brutal rape by three men list month and her family can't afford an abortion. "Unless challenged, the state of Michigan will be compelled to add t9 the tragedy by cruelly denying ac- cess to a Medicaid abortion and forc- ing this 15- year old and other poverty- striken families to carry sch violently imposed pregnancies t term," Simon said in a letter an- nouncing the lawsuit. He said the lawsuit would be filed Thursday in Wayne County Circuit Court and will ask that the state be required to pay for an aportion for the girl, whose family iS on welfare. A leader of an anti- abortion goup, which has argued rape sur- vvors rarely become pregnant be- cause of the attacks, said the suit only will compound the tragedy for the rape survivor. "I think it's tragic she has to go through rape and it's a travesty that she now is going to be dragged into the public arena through the law- Ssiit," said Barbara listing, president of Right to Life of Michigan. "What this little girl needs is lQving care to support her through the pregnancy and the ordeal she is going through as a result of the rape. I don't think violence is ever a solu- tion to any problem and abortion Would be the second assaultion her *body." Such a lawsuit has been expected since the abortion ban , known as Proposal A, won approval by a 57 percent to 43 percent margin on Nov. 8 and ended the state's expenditure of about 6 million a year for some 18, 500 abortions for poor women. Both Lansing and Simon pre- dicted the case would end up before the Michigan Supreme Court. The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 23, 1989 - Page 3 Baker-Mandela Center projects stress education ,i. BY LAURA COUNTS "If we accept the belief that knowledge is empowering, then we must also accept the responsibility of collecting and presenting that knowledge in a way that is accessible to people's lives and struggles," Tracye Matthews said at an open house and fund raiser for the Ella Baker-Nel- son Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Education last night. The focus of the center is on education, said Matthews, a University graduate. The center grew out of a need for an institutional approach to fight- ing racism in addition to the confrontational ap- proaches employed by the United Coalition Against Racism, she said. "Recognizing and reclaiming Black history and the histories of other people of color, women, and workers, is one of the basic principles around which the Baker-Mandela Center has organized," Matthews said. In addition to newsletters, weekly brown bag lunch discussion centers, and workshops, the center is currently working on three projects aimed at fur- thering anti-racist education. The first is the compilation of an oral history of Black Women in the Washtenaw County area. Particular emphasis will be on a local welfare rights movement, which was part of a national move- ment, led by Black women in the late 60's. UCAR steering committee member Susan Har- vey said very few people realize that this movement even existed, and that this is "indicative of the type of history that has been documented." "As we look around us within this academic institution, we can find evidence of the distortions and deletions of people like us from the historical record," Matthews said. The center is also working on a video documenting the anti-racist struggle at the Univer- sity. "The type of media that's been generated has been slanted," Harvey said, focusing on individual incidents and ignoring the structure of institutionalized racism. Students directly involved in the anti-racist struggle at the University will be the focus of the center's video. The center hopes to expand the video to cover the anti-racist movement occurring on col- lege campuses nationally, but this is a difficult goal because of the time and money involved, Matthews said. Another project, entitled "Who rules?" is named after a similar project at Columbia University. This research will focus on equal access to education. Harvey said the project is investigating "who is let into the University, and by what criteria." Project participants are studying both how fac- ulty are hired and awarded tenure, as well as the student admissions process. Harvey criticized the use of standardized tests as a basis for admission, saying they are race, class, and sex biased. The center will disseminate their findings to the public, and is working to generate a movement around the issue of equal access to education, Har- vey said. i .r LIZ STEKETEE/Daiiy Tracye Matthews speaks at the Baker/Mandela Center open house and fund raiser last night. About 30 students and faculty attended. Career BY JENNIFER MILLER With spring break near and graduation just around the corner, some seniors may be growing nervous about their career plans. The Career Planning and Placement Office provides several programs and resources to help these seniors find their interests and op- portunities, said Ann Richter Assistant Director of Career Planning and Placement. The programs available are not designed just to provide jobs for University students; CP&P focuses on helping students learn how to find their own jobs, said Richter. "It would be a disservice to find jobs for students without showing them the process because it is most likely they will change jobs more than once in their lives," said Richter. But some seniors at CP&P said it is hard to find a job through the office outside of placemei Michigan. "I looked though the four big books they gave me and found nothing that applied to my interests and geographical pref- erences and I was being flexible," said Leslie Moss, an LSA senior. "The office does recruit from agencies from across the country and even the world, but it is also important to know how to conduct an independent job search because the recruiters that come to campus are limited due to high expenses, said Terri L'Marco, a campus re- cruitment coordinator. More social change, public sector, and government organizations are recruiting at the University this year than in the past, said L'Marco. "But seniors must not look at on campus recruiting as the only job search tool because limitations still exist," she said. There are many different services offered to meet different leering styles. For students assists A complete job search takes "six to eight months, or maybe longer." - Ann Richter Assisstant Director of Ca- reer Planning and Place- ment. who like to discuss their interests, there is individual career advising and peer group counseling. For others who prefer a more in- dependent approach, there are computer pro- grams and a library of written information. "In addition to the information at Career Planning and Placement, we urge students to seek out different perspectives from profes- seniors. sors, the organizations they are interested in and people already in the field they are inquir- ing into," said L'Marco It is not too late to start job searching, office staff members said. The walk-in ser- vice and the program manuals are the best places to start, said L'Marco. If you are looking to secure a job by grad- uation, however, you may become frustrated. According to Anne Richter, a complete job search takes "six to eight months, or maybe longer" Furthermore, "how happy people are with their job positions usually parallels the time they put into finding their position." Richter also advises job searchees to be willing to relocate or explore creative ways of pursuing their interests that may not be in the competitive mainstream. Witness says North repeatedly denied charges WASHINGTON (AP) - The former House intelligence committee chair testified yesterday at Oliver North's trial that his first inquiries about reports of U.S. military help to the Nicaragua Contras met with repeated official denials. Rep. Lee Hamilton (D- Ind.) the first prosecution witness, said he got denials in two letters from then- Na- tional Security Adviser Robert Mc- Farlane and at a committee briefing before he finally asked for a meeting with North, then an aide on the Na- tional Security Council staff. The inquiries were first made in August 1985 following news reports that North was helping raise moneyI for the Contras and giving the rebels tactical military advice despite pro- hibitions on U.S. aid first enacted byI Congress in the so- called Boland Amendment of 1984. "Colonel North insisted he had not violated the Boland Amendment, that he was not assisting the Contras by raising money, that he had not provided any military advice to the Contras," Hamilton said. Hamilton also said he asked McFarlane about the media reports. "When McFarlane told me they were not engaged in raising funds for the Contras and that the National Security Council was not providing military advice... I took Mr. McFar- lane's word for it. I relied upon what the national security adviser for the president told me." For that reason, said Hamilton, he did not pose questions about the Contras to the CIA or the Defense Department. Prosecutors are trying to show that North, then a Marine lieutenant colonel serving on the NSC staff, subverted the processes of govern- ment by helping McFarlane draft false answers to letters from Congress inquiring about the news reports. North is charged, among othe1 things, with obstructing congres- sional inquiries into his activities in 1985 and 1986. McFarlane has pleaded guilty to four misdemeanor counts of withholding information." from Congress. GET 1I T O TNE C:RAp -" - --- i= . - A -I - - - The PersonaI Coiumn MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS THE LIST x A I CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 f t 1 What's happening in Ann Arbor today I L Speakers "Comparable Worth: The Paradox of Technocratic Re- form" - Barbara Nelson, University of Minnesota, Rackham E. Conference Rm., 4 pm. Every- one welcome. Reception follow- 'ing. "Doing Archeology in Macedonia, Greece" - Miha- 'las Fotiadis, 2009 Ruthven Musiems, 12 noon-i pm. "Heredity and Development'' - Susan Qyama, Ph.D., John Jay College, Rackham E. Lecture, 4 pm. Meetings Palestine Solidarity Com- mittee - 2212 MLB, 7 pm. Students Concerned About Animal Rights - 124 E. Quad, '6-8 pm. Rainforest Action Move- ment - 1040 Dana, 7 pm. Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry - rm. 3 Hillel, 6:30 pm. Indian American Student Association - Michigan Rm., :Michigan Union, 5:30 pm. Everyone is welcome. PIRGIM - Fourth Floor. Michi- Furthermore Coffee Hour: "Coffee and Coffee Houses infthe Ot- toman Empire" -- 3050 Frieze, 5:30 pm: International Coffee Hour: "Islam: An Open Way for All Mankind" - Rm. A Michi- gan League, 12 noon. Northwalk - Sun-Thur, 9 pm-1 am. Call 763-WALK or stop by 3224 Bursley. Safewalk - Sun-Thur, 8 pm- 1:30 am; Fri-Sat, 8-11:30 pm. Peer Writing Tutors - 611 Church St. Computing Center, 7- 11 pm. Tutors ECB trained. Performances Music at Mid-Day - Doctoral Students from UM School of Music Composition present works, Pen- delton Rm., Michigan Union, 12:15 pm. Free. Steve Gillette & Cindy Mangsen - At the ARK, doors open at 7:30 pm. Traditional and contemporary. Soundstage - Cafe Society Live, U-Club, 10 pm. LT-_ ' e ._. - . . .. oT traditional, sophisticated, contemporary, informal ... 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