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The.Michigan Daily - Friday, November 3, 1989 - Page3
Scholar
speaks on
S OChinese
massacre
by Mike Sobel
Daily Staff Writer
by Ross Tanzer
No, it isn't
there's sure to
tonight in the
ever focus on
University.
Candid Camera, but
be a lot of surprises
first game show to
Ann Arbor and the
It's the Campus Camera Game
Show, a new way for students to
win fast money. The University Ac-
tivities Center (UAC) will be host-
ing the show at 7 p.m. in the
Michigan Union Ballroom.
As its logo states, everyone who
attends has a chance to play, and ev-
eryone has a chance to win. Admis-
sion is free, and the first 100 poten-
tial contestants to arrive will win
door prizes.
Cash will be awarded to winning
contestants, randomly selected by
host Howard Stevens (star of Who's
the Boss and Star Trek) to take part
in four rounds of play. Finalists
from each round will compete in the
end with the chance to win grand
prizes.
Caroline Greenberg, UAC's
prizes
committee chair for special events,
explained that students were video-
taped this past Monday and asked
questions regarding campus hot-
spots and the best and worst of Ann
Arbor. "Tonight's contestants will
have to match answers to these ques-
tions with those people who have
been videotaped," she said.
General Foods International Cof-
fees is sponsoring the show as a
campaign strategy for marketing
their new Double Dutch tasting fla-
vored coffee.
'It will be a night of fun
and laughs. I'm going to
get my friends to go with.
It's a definite change of
pace from the typical
Thursday night.'
-LSA first-year student
Wendy Umphry
"A simulated studio.is being set
up with stage lights and other
equipment," Greenberg said,
"They're expected to begin working
at 8 a.m. It also takes about five
hours to unload the set."
She added that because of the ex-
pensive equipment, "campus security
Contestants in last night's Campus Camera'game show at the Union Ballroom.
officers will be surrounding the
place."
General Foods has sponsored this
program at other schools including
Purdue last week and Ohio State
University earlier this week.
"Both of those schools had a
turnout of about 300 people, and
we're hoping for about the same
here," Greenberg said. "I'm a little
worried though, since something
like this has never been done before
at the University. People might not
know about how great it is."
Those that do know about it
seem excited. LSA first-year student
Wendy Umphry said, "It will be a
night of fun and laughs. I'm going
to get my friends to go with. It's a
definite change of pace from the typ-
ical Thursday night.
Duderstadt attends class, but not for the lecture
by Donna Woodwell advance with the instructor's permis- procedures for out-of-state and mi- bernatorial elections next fall." learn mode," Duderstadt said.'
Daily Staff Writer sion so class schedules will not be nority students, race discrimination Asked what steps are being taken key is reaching out through con
University President James Dud- interrupted, said assistant to the pres- policies, and campus security, to increase minority enrollment, he nities."
Last spring's massacre in
Tiananmen Square was a "political
earthquake" for the Chinese Com-
munist Party, Robert MacFarquhar
said in a speech last night at the
Business School's Hale Auditorium.
MacFarquhar is the director of
Harvard University's Fairbank Cen-
ter for East Asian Studies. He was
the keynote speaker last night in the
second of five conferences held at the
University to discuss the Tiananmen
Square events last spring.
MacFarquhar continued the
earthquake analogy throughout his
speech as he outlined what he
thought to be the initial stresses that
led to the crisis. He cited China's
progressive lack of faith in the
Communist party, urban inflation,
political corruption and increasing
contact with Western thought as
components of this political fault-
line.
"We don't yet know all the an-
swers to why 150,000 students
walked down Tiananman Square
when the '86 demonstrations died
out so quickly," he said, but the
consequent military suppression
provided "the moment when the last
shred of legitimacy of the revolution
of 1949 was torn."
He predicted that the imminent
departure of Deng Xiaoping would
spark the next crisis in China, a
country which' has had a historic,
problem with political successio-
since the Communists took power.
"Crisis will succeed crisis until,
the political leadership realizes that a
political system will have to be into
place which prevents this problem of
succession," he said.
He added, "Hopefully, the next.
China will learn the lessons of
Tiananmen Square and not repem.
them."
THE DAILY
CL ASSIFIEDS
WAY TORGET
FAST R ESUL TS
CA LL 764-0557
EE
E IA
"The
nm u-
erstadt didn't attend Great Books 191
yesterday morning for the lecture on
Greek tragedy.
Instead, he showed up to field
students' questions and concerns
about University issues.
"The administration is frequently
viewed as being locked away in a
blockhouse," he told Prof. Ann
Hansen's class of about 500 stu-
dents. To change this perception,
10;Duderstadt said he tries to visit lec-
tures and seminars as often as he
can.
His visits are planned months in
ident Shirley Clarkson.
Duderstadt said he also occasion-
ally eats in residence hall cafeterias
to "find out what's on students
minds."
At first, students reacted with si-
lence and Duderstadt broke the ice
with light questions like, "Are you
all adjusting to the University all
right?" and "Do you think we should
allow Willy the Wolverine into the
stadium?"
However, questions soon focused
on more substantive issues, includ-
ing tuition increases, enrollment
"Does the University have any
signs for greater support from the
state government?" one student
asked. Duderstadt replied that no sign
had yet been given, but he hoped
funding for state colleges "would be
a major campaign issue in the gu-
replied, "We are engaging in a broad
array of activities." He stressed the
need for outreach programs in ele-
mentary and secondary schools,
especially within Black and Hispanic
communities.
"We are currently in listen-and-
Duderstadt ended the impromptu
session by saying, "(University offi-
cials) really do need your input." He
said he could personally be reached
over MTS, through scheduled ap-
pointments, or by "cornering him on
the Diag."
Salvadoran guerrillas leave talks
CORRECTIONS
Michigamua has agreed to eliminate all references to Native American
culture from their entire organization and not just their initiation rituals as
was reported yesterday.
WCBN is a student-run station, comprised primarily of students with
4 Only a few non-student volunteers working in an advisory capacity, they do
not actively seek nor hire non-student DJ's.
Craig Fulton is the president of the Society of Minority Engineering
Students. The Daily misidentified him yesterday's edition.
The quotation in yesterday's paper, "If we were to leave the pyramid here
constructed of styrofoam it would remain here for at least 100 years," should
have been credited to coordinator of Earth Day Organizing Committee Judi
Goldman.
Michi Daily
HAGHLRTSS M HE9
783-0379
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) - Guerrillas yesterday with-
drew from cease-fire talks with the
rightist government to protest the
bombing of a union hall that killed
10 people.
In a radio broadcast, the
Farabundo Marti National Liberation
Front guerrillas said they will not
take part in the next round of negoti-
ations until President Alfredo Chris-
tiani's government offers better
guarantees for the survival of leftist
organizations.
Representatives of the two sides
in the decade-old civil war were
scheduled to hold their third meeting
this year on Nov. 20-21 in Caracas,
Venezuela.
Earlier meetings in Mexico City
and San Jose, Costa Rica, had dead-
locked, but the two sides had agreed
to continue meeting monthly until a
cease-fire was negotiated.
In the broadcast over private radio
station YSU, the guerrillas said they
had information the bomb attack
Tuesday that killed 10 people and
wounded 29 was planned and carried
out by the military with the knowl-
edge of Christiani.
The guerrillas gave no details to
back up their assertion. No one
claimed responsibility for the bomb-
ing, part of an escalating cycle of
violence.
THE LEGISLATIVE
STUDIES INSTITUTE
Prepare for a Career in the United States Senate
The Legislative Studies Institute (LSI) of Capitol Hill, Washington, DC, is now
accepting a limited number of highly qualified applicants for the spring and fall.
The program aims to increase understanding of the legislative process while offering
preparation for responsible policy making positions in Senatorial offices or Committees.
Our exclusive, semester-long legislative training program involves a very
competitive admissions process.
If you are interested in pursuing a career in the United States Senate,
please write: The Legislative Studies Institute
317 Massachusetts Ave., N.E.
WashgngV , D.C 20002
or call
(202) 54440904
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