CMU retains Indian logos MT. PLEASANT (AP) - Cen- tral Michigan University athletes will remain Chippewas despite pres- sure from the state Civil Rights Commission to drop their Native 4merican logos. The Mt. Pleasant college will embark on a three-year plan to dig- i'ify the way the name is used, said Central Michigan President Edward Jakubauskas. "If misuse of the name still oc- ours under these conditions, then we dhould drop the name, " he said yes- torday. Saginaw Chippewa subchief Ruth Moses said the tribe is happy with e decision. "It's a step forward in bringing tihe Native American respect," she 4aid. "It will help both of us. A lot f people going to CMU don't know we're here. They don't know thippewas are just three miles away~" "It doesn't bother me," said Myr- tOe Tolonen, chair of the Keweenaw* Pay Tribe in L'Anse, "I never had 4ny problem with it." t Jakubauskas' decision follows a local committee recommendation that Central Michigan retain the In- 4ian name if it ban Native American mnascots and drum beats as well as start student education programs on the Chippewa culture. Beside Central Michigan, three tther Michigan colleges use Indian Ipgos: the Michigan Christian Col- lege Warriors, the Lake Michigan 4mmunity College Indians and the pastern Michigan University Iurons. Those colleges are still Itudying the issue. The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 17, 1989-- Page 3 Candidates debate city-space JULIE HOLLMAN/Daily Dana Rapisardi, an LSA sophomore, attends the monthly meeting of the monthly meeting of the Ann Arbor Society 4 Origami held at the Slauson Intermediate School last night. Native Americans gather for 17th annual A2 Pow Wow BY NOAH FINKEL Democratic mayoral candidate Ray Clevenger unveiled his proposal to provide more room for the city's bureaucrats yesterday at the Chamber of Commerce's "Soap Box" forum at the Ann Arbor Inn. The forum featured speeches from all mayoral and city council candi- dates competing in the April 3 city election. Clevenger proposed that the city Ann Arbor Elections '89 rent some of the 360,000 square feet of vacant office space in Ann Arbor to lessen the burden on what many call an overcrowded City Hall. Ann Arbor voters rejected tax in- creases for a City Hall renovation in each of the last two annual city elections, despite the city council's pleas for added funding. In January, the council rejected a resolution to put a $24 million millage proposal on the April ballot. Incumbent Republican Mayor Gerald Jernigan has said during the campaign that he will pursue another millage proposal if elected. But Clevenger is searching for an alternative to a tax increase. "We've heard about overcrowding in City Hall," he said. "But we have 360,000 square feet of vacant office space in this city. Is there anything wrong with the city of Ann Arbor renting that space?" Jernigan thinks so. He said Cle- venger's proposal has already been looked at by the city and has been Read awd 116e Vaieq C~wxqied rejected because many believe t cost-prohibitive given the city's budget deficit. Meanwhile, Jernigan continued his attack on Clevenger in front of the crowd of about 100 business- people. "You're not going to hear about any new ideas from the Democrats,' said Jernigan. "(Their campaign) is just going to be a different spin of what council Republicans are already doing." Libertarian mayoral candidate David Damroze also made an appearance in which he tried to fa- miliarize the audience with the Lib- ertarian Party principles. BY VERA SON GWE Native Americans from around the nation will gather to sing, dance, renew acquaintances, and cele- brate their culture at this weekend's 17th annual Ann Arbor Pow Wow. A traditional Native American celebration, the Pow Wow symbolizes peace and unity between Native American tribes, and is important for the preservation of the Native American heritage, said Mike Dashner, a Native American representative at Minority Student Services. Ann Arbor's Pow Wow, sponsored by the Univer- sity's Native American Student Association, is the largest in the Great Lakes area. Last year more than 300 Native American dancers - from Canada to Ari- zona - came to the Pow Wow. Drummers and dancers will share songs and chants with each other at the Coliseum, located at Hill and Fifth. Traditional dance competitions will take place Saturday and Sunday at 1 pm. And in addition to the festivities, traders will be selling authentic jewelry, carvings, horns, beads, and other goods. All students and Ann Arbor residents are invited to the Pow Wow, where they will have the chance to learn about the Native American culture and talk to the participants of the the festival, said Amy Delong of the Native American Student Association. Rev. criticizes Christian Zionist support of Israel DIMA ZALATIMO Christian Zionists have extended unconditional support of the state of isfael, a Presbyterian Reverend told an audience of about 50 students and community members at Rackham jmphitheater last night. i'"The lecture, titled "Anxious for Armageddon- Probing Israel's t pport Among American Christian Zionists," was presented by the Rev. bonald Wagner, the national director of the Palestinian Human Rights Campaign. It was sponsored by the teneral Union of Palestinian Stu- 4ents. Christian Zionism is "a largely Protestant Christian phenomenon, primarily in the fundamental ele- ments, that support the establish- inent of a Jewish state as a fulfill- inent of biblical prophecy," Wagner aid. He said Christian Zionists think anyone who truly believes in the Bible sees Israel and the fulfillment of prophecy as inseparable." Wagner, who strongly opposes (his movement said, "In my view, phis is heretical in terms of Christian * octrine." Though Wagner never at- tacked Israel's right to exist, he criticized Christians who view Is- rael's existence as a biblical right Aind their use of the bible as justification for Israeli human rights violations against Palestinians. Fundamentalists like Pat Robert- son, Jim and Tammy Baker, and Jerry Falwell are the visible evangelicals who believe in Chris- Sian Zionism, he said. "There is sufficient evidence to believe former president Reagan himself subscribes to Christian Zionism," said Wagner. He said on five different occasions Reagan pub- licly supported the views advocated by Christian Zionists. According to the bible, the formation of the state of Israel is the first step toward Armageddon, or the end of the world. Wagner traced the roots of Chris- tian Zionism to Jewish apocalyptic thought and the prophecy that the Jews would return to form a state. The movement later appeared in Britain in the 16th century with the Protestant Reformation, Wagner said. The basic principles of Christian Zionism were established in 1829, he said, prior to Theodor Herzl's Jewish Zionism, which was estab- lished in 1897. After the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, the International Christian Embassy was established in Jerusalem by fundamentalists "to show support and love for Israel." In 1985, the ICE organized the first Christian Zionist Congress in Basile, Switzerland. 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