The Michigan Qaily - Monday, November 20, 1989 - Page 3 ACLU establishes pro-choic y;Laura Counts aily Women's Issue Reporter The American Civil Liberties Union's campus chapter is calling together several pro-choice campus groups that haven't necessarily cru- sadod for abortion rights in the past. Organizers of the coalition hope to activate groups which are con- cerned with civil liberties, said LSA senior Matt Leitman, an ACLU *einber. "With the growing threat to abor- tion rights, the majority can no longer be silent," Leitman said. Three groups - the College Democrats, the University chapter of the Democratic Socialists of Amer- ica, and Women of Guatemala - have joined the coalition so far, and several other groups have expressed interest but have not yet formally *ied. The coalition has two initial goals, Leitman said. The first is to educate the public about the threats to abortion rights posed nationally by pending Supreme Court cases, and locally by restrictive bills in the Michigan legislature. "There are a lot of law students in the {ACLU who can decipher the le- 1 jargon for the pubic," Leitman d. e group The group will "get the word out" through letters to newspapers, and a radio show on WCBN in De- cember. But the main focus of the group is legislative, said LSA sophomore Katie Sanders. Rather than going to rallies, the group hopes to pressure legislators through letter-writing drives. To this end, she added, the coali- tion hopes to motivate people who wouldn't normally participate in protests or abortion clinic defenses but would like to do something for the pro-choice cause. Leitman said the group will also act as a "watchdog" for communities where the majority is pro-choice, but have elected legislators who are in Lansing voting against abortion rights. Writing letters to their local newspapers will let these communi- ties know what the legislators are doing, he said. Members of the pro-choice com- mittee of the campus ACLU are planning to do most of the organiza- tional work for the coalition, while other groups can contribute as much or as little as they like, said LSA first-year student Kimberly Shaeffer. "The main goal is just to keep them involved," she said. Three E. Ger cross Ib DRESDEN, East Germany (AP - Tens of thousands of protesters i at least eight cities braved icy wind yesterday to keep the heat on th Communist leadership, despite ope borders and the election of a reform minded Cabinet one day earlier. Nearly three million Eas Germans crossed into West Berli and West Germany between Frida and yesterday, the second weeken since the government opened border to the West, border police said. Mos were just visiting for the day. Ferry service across the Elb River, which forms part of th border, resumed yesterday a Hitzacker, about 80 miles southeas of Hamburg, for the first time sinc April 23, 1945. In another change, the officia ADN news agency reported that th roles of the party and th government in East Germany' armed forces will be separated. ADN said 50,000 peopl participated in Dresden's firs officially authorized protest rally Other estimates of the crowd siz ranged up to 100,000. "Lord don't forgive them becaus they knew what they did," said on banner in the southern city, makin a biting play on words from Jesu Christ's agony on the cross. In East Berlin, thousand participated in an unauthorized marc from the Alexanderplatz square t Parliament, calling for sweepin reforms and abolition of th Communist Party's guarantee monopoly on power. Parliament on Saturday confirme a reform-minded Cabinet o Communist Premier Hans Modrov and created a committee to stud possible constitutional changes including dropping a lav guaranteeing Communist rule. "We won't let ourselves b blinded by the open borders," sai million mans Remembering Independence Latvians marched through the capital of their Soviet Baltic republic, Riga, on Saturday to mark the anniversary of their nation's independence which was ended by a Soviet occupation in 1940. High school students visit B-School by; Vera Songwe Daily Minority Issues Reporter Many students and faculty have been pushing to increase minority enrollment and retention at the Uni- Wrsity. But in order to attract mi- 'norities, the University must make prospective students familiar with the: campus and the opportunities available to them. Last Friday, about 100 students from seven Detroit high schools at- tended a "Business Awareness Day," organized by the University's Black Business Students Association W SSA) to expose Black high school dents to the Business School. 'fThis program is organized to bring high school seniors to the University to make them aware of the 'opportunities here at the Busi- nes$ School," said second-year busi- ness student Byron Foster, chair of the event. Denise Harvey, a Business WORRECTIONS The International Center and the School student services counselor, said, "Minority students listen to a lot of the rumors out there and make decisions based on rumors without talking to administrators or coun- selors to find out the truth." Most of the students who at- tended have shown an interest in business in their high schools. "It is a career that kids are most interested in today," said Christine Holmberg, a senior advisor and counseling officer at Cooley High School. "All the students that came are in the business co-op program," which allows students to intern at various area businesses. The event included brief presenta- tions by five members of the busi- ness school faculty and presentations by admissions and financial aid per- sonnel. "Often times, high school stu- dents may not understand or be aware of the career opportunities that are University's Office of International available to them in corporate Amer- ica," Harvey said. "This is what this program is intended for." Later in the day, the high school students were divided into groups to perform an exercise simulating a normal B-School class. Most of the students praised the program and some said they would consider coming to the University. "I thought about coming here, but this has made me more enthusi- astic," said Damon Thorton, a stu- dent at Osborne High School in De- troit. "I like the environment and the different cultures that are represented here." Many other branches of the Uni- versity have similar programs aimed at making high school students more aware of the University. "We are not unique in our ef- forts," Harvey said. "But if other students are not doing this they may want to accept this as a challenge and begin." order ) one protest banner. "Swap DDR n (East Germany) for Mickey Mouse," is said another. e One sign suggested, "Honecker to n court," and speakers called 'for - prosecution of the country's former leaders, including ousted president t and party chief Erich Honecker, who n was replaced by Egon Krenz on Oct. y 18. d Krenz was quoted by a West s German newspaper as saying st Honecker is one of those under investigation by a parliamentary e commission. e Just outside the capital, about t 30,000 Communist Party backers t demonstrated in Potsdam to show e their support for the government's announced reform program, ADN l said. e e ADN reported other pro- s democracy rallies yesterday in a half- dozen cities and towns. The official e agency said "thousands" protested in t Karl Marx Stadt but did not give a . more precise crowd estimate for the e march there or in East Berlin. e At least some demonstrators were e cool to the idea of unifying the two g Germanys, a subject of much debate s since East German borders opened i Nov. 9. Is "Reunification now - No h Thanks," read one of the banners at o the Dresden march. "We are not on g the Reeperbahn where you can buy a e union for money," it added, referring d to the famous red-light district in Hamburg, West Germany. d "Today we want everything," f Ludwig Goettler, a well-known w classical trumpet player, said in a y speech. "But in no case do we still s, want what we have 'achieved' over w the past 40 years," he said in a caustic reference to repeated claims e of East German achievements under d Communism. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR SKIN STUDY The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology Research is seeking volun- teers to test a new therapy for black patients who have uneven skin color/dark spots on the face or arms as a result of skin damage. Office visits and medication are provided free for eligible participants. For further information, please call: (313) 936-4070, Monday through Friday 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. a 44 Scientists find 'oldest' object yet in universe Programs are two separate departments. The office coordinates study abroad programs through the University. The Daily misreported this information in Friday's edition. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - As- tronomers say they discovered the oldest, most distant object yet found in the universe, a star-like body called a quasar, about 14 billion light years or 82 trillion billion miles from Earth. "We've found the most distant object on record," said astronomer Maarten Schmidt of the California Institute of Technology. "We are now seeing an object as it was a lit- tle over 1 billion years after the be- ginning of the universe." Other scientists called the discov- ery significant because existence of the 14-billion-year-old quasar chal- lenges a widely accepted theory of how quickly stars and galaxies formed. And light from the quasar-il- luminated gas in space, possibly giving astronomers their first look at the primordial matter from which all stars, galaxies and even life eventu- ally arose. The quasar, or quasi-stellar ob- ject, was seen through the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observa- tory, northeast of San Diego. It is located in the constellation Ursa Ma- jor just below the Big Dipper's bowl. The discovery, to be announced formally today, is reported in De- cember's issue of the Astronomical Journal by Schmidt and astronomers James Gunn of Princeton University and Donald Schneider of the Institute for Advanced Study, an independent research center in Princeton, NJ. A quasar is the size of our solar system. They are the brightest ob- jects in the universe, the brightest emitting more light than 1,000 galaxies of 100 billion stars each. Astronomers believe quasars form near black holes in the centers of galaxies. Black holes are objects so massive their gravity sucks in even light. But as matter is pulled into a black hole, intense bursts of light are emitted. Scientists say a gigantic explo- sion called the Big Bang created the universe 10 billion to 20 billion years ago. They usually cite 15 bil- lion years as the universe's estimated age. On that scale, the newly discov- ered quasar formed at least 14 billion years ago, meaning its distance from Earth is 14 billion light years, or 82 trillion miles. One light year equals 5.88 trillion miles. ORIENT SPECIALS E fl1011 TrrU 12M13 ONLY Bangkok............ fr $899 Hong Kong:........ fr. $859 Seoul ................. fr $809 Singapore.......... ft $859 Taipei ............fr $809 EUROPE-SPECIALS Amsterdam ev.... ftr$449 Copenhagen...... fr $559 ,Frankfurt............fr $449 Glasgow............. fr $469 London................fr $379 Paris.................. fr $469 ALLPRICES SMECT TO AVAILAIITY & CHANGE IJYAVEL; 209-211 S. State St. Ann Arbor. Mt 48104 U of M Designated Agency Meetings Philosophy Club - 7 p.m. in 2'220 Angell Hall WJM Women's Club Lacrosse - 9|-11 p.m. at the Tartan Turf Recycle UM Environmental Education Meeting - 9-10 p.m. in the Dana Student Lounge Michigan Student Assembly Women's Issues Committee - 6 p.m. in Union Rm. 3909 MSA Peace and Justice Commission - planning for "Art and Social Change Week"; 7:15 in Union Rm. 3909 IjM Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club - 7:30-8:30 p.m. at the CCRB; beginners welcome Jewish Feminist Group - "Homosexuality & Judaism"; 7 p.m. at Hillel TJM Snowboarding Club - 6 plm. at 430 Cross St. Anorexia/Bulimia Support Group - 6:30-8 p.m.; call 668- 8585 Speakers Chem. Dept. Seminar Series - Prof. Charles Casey of the U of Wisconsin; Dr. Fred Tebbe of IDuPont Central Research and Prof. Steve Buchwald of MIT speak at 4 in Chem. 1640 "The Issue of Anthropology and History" - Tom Zuidema and Sally Humphreys speak at noon in 1524 Rackham; brown- bag Auto-racing - John Caponigro of Championship AutoaRacing Teams; 4:30 in Hale Aud. Vicitina Writnr Cpipv - Northwalk - North campus night-time walking service, Rm. 2333 Bursley; 8 p.m.- 1:30 a.m. or call 763-WALK Undergraduate English Associ- ation Tutoring- 7-9 p.m. in Union 4000 A; sponsored by the Undergraduate English Association Free Tutoring - all lower-level math, science and engineering courses; 7-11 p.m. in UGLi Rm. 307 Color National Artists' Book Project - features artists' books of more than 200 American Women of Color; in the Slusser Gallery; 10a.m.-5 p.m. Photo exhibit of racial violence in the U.S. - in Rm. 3 of East Engineering; 10-3 daily Women of Courage: An Exhibi- tion of Photographs by Judith Sedwick - portraits of 55 Black American women; Grad. Library North Lobby; 8am-5pm Arpilleras from Peru and Chile - distinctive fabric wall-hangings by women from Latin America; Residential College; 1-5 p.m. Spark Revolutionary History Series - "Imperialism"; 7-8 p.m. in MLB B122 Store Front Churches in De- troit - Center for Afro-American and African Studies; 200 W. Engine.; 8am-5pm Michigan Youth Ensemble in Concert - 7:30 p.m. in Hill Aud.; free Art and Holy Powers in the Gold Tidig TIJE9O OF FELIN K~IK* A Sr4W.? Big, beautiful 2 bedroom apartments available now for as little as $550.00/mdnth. This includes heat for the long, icy winter, hot water for cooking and bathing, parking, and laundry facilities. Convenient and secure campus locations. You don't have to be cramped up like a sardine anymore. Call Prime Student Housing today. Prime Student Housing 'e s Fnr Pndnrino vilne and nimlity to SRO and rdnn't nnu -3nnthnr I I