Page 2-The Michigan Daily -Friday, October 20,1989 Student- produced T show begins third season on Sunday morning by Sandhya Rao While most students sweat their way through midterms, a fortunate few are getting to use their talents in a more artistic fashion. These are the crew members, producers, scriptwrit- ers and above all, creators of 'B- Side', a monthly television show to be broadcast on the Ann Arbor Community Access channel and WIHT-TV channel 31. Student participants feel that their final product is more gratifying than receiving a letter grade on a test. LSA senior Josh Pollack, one of the show's producers, said, "The sense of accomplishment that I get out of B-side is much greater than what I would get out of reading a book or writing a paper." The Communications Depart- ment offers B-Side as a Special Pro- jects Course. Marshall Hall, execu- tive producer of B-Side, feels that the television show is a perfect way for students to "work in a situation that is as close to real life... [as can be created] in an academic setting." Hall described the show as "a video magazine." Each half-hour show is hosted by two students who introduce and discuss the program's segments. B-Side is created to appeal to students as well as the Ann Arbor community, Hall said. The show's contents range from a piece on the continuing local support the struggle for Chinese democracy to a segment on the local comedy troupe Just Kid- ding. B-Side project participants choose to "contract" a certain level of in- volvement ranging from one to three credit hours. However, the amount of time and effort students put into the show is often far greater than the credit hours represent. "One four or five-minute seg- ment will involve many hours of editing," Pollack said. He has spent 60-70 hours working on his four- minute segment. Although the com- bination of writing, filming, and editing is a long process, Pollack said he feels that the end result is definitely rewarding. The first show of B-Side's third season can be seen this Sunday at 11 a.m. on the Community Access channel and channel 31. Survivor of 'Dirty War' speaks about her struggle for justice in Argentina by Hunter VanValkenburgh Kidnapping, torture, and extra-judicial execu- tion. These were the perils of living in Argentina as a "subversive" during the period from 1976 to 1981. So said Renee Epelbaum, an Argentinian Jew whose three children "disappeared" in 1976 and were never seen again. Epelbaum spoke at Guild House yesterday afternoon. In a voice cracking with emotion, she de- scribed the military coup that overthrew the elected government and proceeded to eliminate anyone suspected of leftist leanings. "They said they were leading a 'holy war' against subversives." Her own children were 20, 23, and 25 years old, and worked with the poor in Buenos Aires, which made them suspect. Several parallels were drawn about the simi- larity between the so-called "Dirty War" and the Holocaust. The Argentine military used the a Nazi model of organization and discipline, Epel- baum said, and was known to have ties to escaped Nazis. While Jews were not specifically targeted for disappearance, they were disproportionately repre- sented among the victims, and received harsher treatment. Some of the victims and their relatives had fled Nazi persecution earlier in the century. On April 30, 1977, a group of women - in- cluding Epelbaum - who had lost children, took their case to the street. They formed "Los Madres de Plaza de Mayo" (mothers of May Plaza) and staged daily rallies in the center of Buenos Aires. Until the ascension of the civilian govern- ment, Epelbaum said, the mothers had to endure harassment, fire hoses, and the risk that they too would fall victim to the repression. One of the group's founders was kidnapped in 1977, and tortured to death. The civilian government commissioned an investigation into the Dirty War in 1982. De- spite public outrage at the report, few officers have been imprisoned for their crimes, according to Epelbaum. Los Madres are still meeting in the Plaza de Mayo because they still haven't been told where their children are. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports German activists contine to pressure Communist Party BERLIN - Protesters may fill East German streets again unless the new leader, Egon Krenz, abandons his hard-line record and begins the kind of reforms under way elsewhere in the Soviet bloc, pro-democracy ac- tivists said yesterday. Krenz made it clear almost immediately after replacing Erich Honecker on Wednesday that the Communist Party would resist the democratic trends evident in Poland and Hungary. "Krenz stands for the continuation of neo-Stalinist politics," said Reinhard Schult, a founder of New Forum, the largest pro-democracy group in East Germany. Speaking on RIAS radio of West Berlin, he said Krenz "did not have one word to say about the causes of the current crisis and made no offer for talks with the opposition." Author RoIf Schneider, a critic of the government, told RIAS: "The crisis will keep dragging on." Quake rocks rural China BEIJING - A series of at least six earthquakes rumbled across rural Northern China late Wednesday and early yesterday, destroying more than 10,000 homes, killing at least 29 people and injuring more than 150. The quakes measuring from 5.0 up to 6.1 on the Richter scale, hit Shanxi and Hebei provinces, the official China Daily said today. Most of the destruction occurred in the Shanxi province, and the daily quoted a local Communist Party official there as saying, "The problem is serious and the casualties may increase." The worst quake was centered about 135 miles west of Beijing on the border of the Shanxi and Hebei provinces and struck less than 24 hours after a massive earthquake hit the San Francisco area, but State Seismological Bureau officials said there was no evidence the quakes were related. Spanish author wins Nobel STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Camilo Jose Cela, a Spanish writer whose violent, grotesque images sprang from the civil war that killed more than 1 million of his countrymen, won the Nobel prize for literature yesterday. The Swedish Academy cited Cela, 73, for "rich and intensive prose which with restrained compassion forms a challenging vision of man's vulnerability." It said his novel "The Family of Pascual Duarte," published in 1942, was the most popular work of fiction in Spanish since Miguel Cervantes' masterpiece "Don Quixote" was published nearly 400 years ago. "I understand that this is the culmination of my literary career after many years of work," Cela told Swedish radio from his home in Guadala- jara, 30 miles northeast of Madrid. Cela, a bon vivant know in Spain for a flamboyant lifestyle, told re- porters over lunch that "life is like a game of tennis, and this time I won. State supports AIDS victims LANSING - The state has begun paying the private insurance premi- ums of a handful of AIDS patients, and the new program already has saved thousands of Medicaid dollars, officials said yesterday. The Michigan plan has served as a model for programs being developed in other states, including Colorado, Wisconsin, New York and California, said state Rep. David Hollister (D-Lansing) who devised the idea. He said the plan could save the state $4 million by 1991. Nine meii have been approved so far to participate in the two-year pilot program, which began Oct. 1 in the metropolitan Detroit counties of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb, home to about 70 percent of the state's AIDS-infected population. The help is given to AIDS victims who had a job with insurance, but were forced to stop working because they became too ill. Federal regula- tions allow them to continue their insurance for up to 18 months at their own expense, but many can't afford it. EXTRAS Separated at birth? el 4 01 PROTEST. Continued from Page 1 positioned themselves below the window of Hutchins Hall and at- tempted to disrupt Rehnquist's speech by chanting, "Racist, sexist, anti-gay; William Rehnquist go away." Law School Dean Lee Bollinger confronted the demonstrators and de- clared, "I will have you removed from here and arrested if you don't move away from here. If you disrupt by yelling I'm going to have you ar- rested." When questioned by the protesters, Bollinger said, "Don't de- bate the law with me." As the protestors slowly dis- persed, Laur said, "We're leaving be- cause we don't want to get arrested." Sgt. Allen Hartwig of the Ann Arbor Police Department said the demonstrators were on University property and if Bollinger asked them to leave and they refused, they could be arrested. "Whether or not the University wants something done... you have to have people breaking the law first," he said. Hartwig said 11 Ann Arbor po- lice officers were on hand during the speech. The University asked for the police presence, he said. In addition, six to eight campus security officers were located at the entrances to the Law School, said Assistant Director of Public Safety Robert Pifer. Organizers felt the effort was suc- cessful. "Despite the weather it was a good turnout. It was a very mili- tant turnout," said Laur. 'U' graduate leaves behind a lofty legacy By Mike Sobel Daily Staff Reporter "His parents wanted to do some- thing to perpetuate his name and his spirit," said Brad Canale, director of the Engineering Development Of- fice, of Francois-Xavier Bagnoud, a University graduate who was killed in a helicopter crash in 1986. Yesterday the University's Board of Regents accepted a donation of $5 'million from the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Association, to help fund a new $18 million aerospace engineer- ing complex on North Campus to be named after Bagnoud. The Association, founded by his parents, also consists of other family and two University graduates (Alon Kasha and Silvana Paternostro) who were close to Bagnoud. Bagnoud was.a skilled pilot as well as an aerospace engineering graduate. The Association will also donate several million dollars to set up student fellowships in aerospace engineering. "It is very clear they're making the gift to the students," Canale said. Bagnoud, a native of Geneva, went to secondary school in Paris and then spent a year at the Ameri- can school there before enrolling at Michigan in 1979. In addition to be- ing a member of "Vulcans," a high honors engineering society at the University, Bagnoud used to fly twin-engine planes weekly at Ypsi- lanti's Willow Run Airport, said Pa- ternostro. After graduating in '82, Bagnoud returned to Switzerland, where he be- came the youngest commercial pilot in Europe and helped his father with his helicopter rescue company. Bag- noud died in an accident in Mali, Africa on Jan. 14, 1986 during the Paris-Dakar auto race for which he was a rescue pilot. Kasha, Bagnoud's roommate for four years, remembered him as "a very social and involved person. He didn't just lock himself up in the li- brary." Paternostro agreed: "He was a beautiful person... the way everyone said hello to him on the Diag was like nothing I've ever seen before." Bagnoud came from an affluent background. His mother, the Count- ess Albina du Boisrouvray, is selling a collection of valuable artworks and jewelry at auction around the world to generate funds for the Associa- tion, which will sponsor humanitar- ian activities around the world, Kasha said. "He was a regular student... he didn't drive around in a Rolls Royce. And he loved Ann Arbor," Kasha added. Canale said the gift reflects the great impact the University had on Bagnoud. "Had he lived, he would have do- nated it himself," Canale said. Ann Arbor's Smart Alternative Featuring Volvos for $19.95/day __ " Pickup and return service available " Major credit cards accepted R k M t i 4 d ." 72200 S. Industrial Call 996-0660 ECONO-CAR OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK " Choose from small economical cars to fine luxury cars " Special weekend rates' - Pick-up services upon request " We accept cash deposits Rent a car from ECONO-CAR 438 W. Huron, Ann Arbor 761-8845 LIBRARY Continued from Page 1 search and teaching laboratories, classrooms, offices, computer labs and wind tunnels. Five million dollars of the initial funding is being provided by the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Associa- tion, which was formed in honor of a graduate of the aerospace engineer- ing program who died in a helicopter crash in January 1986 (See related story on page 2). The University administration is also requesting $181,100,000 from the state for renovations of campus buildings. Major renovation requests include $20,000,000 for the Frieze Building; $15,000,000 for Angell Hall; and $11,000,000 for the School of Natural Resources Build- ing. Again, these projects are contin- gent on receipt of state funding. President James Duderstadt said upkeep of the buildings should be important for the state. "This is a very important issue for the people of Michigan; their institutions are literally crumbling around them." ~JAZZ ND THE APPIEST SHOW Of THE YEAR Big Bird Barbara Bush --By Alex Gordon +be £truaiu The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 in-town and $39 out-of-town, for fi only $18.00 in-town and $22.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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