1 a w i R Graduate cafe starts cooking The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 9, 1990 - Page 3 Judge speaks on Dred-Scott Ruling I by neather Fee Daily Graduate Schools Reporter Graduate students no longer have to leave the Rackham building to find intimate conversation, coffee and pastries. A new cafe, "Horace and Mary's", which is limited to graduate students opened last Thursday on the second floor of Rackham. "The cafe fits into our overall ob- jective to make graduate students feel a part of the University. If we don't do that no one will," said Associate Rackham Dean Susan Lipschutz, who came up with the idea of having the cafe for graduate students. Students were involved in the process from start to finish. Third year Public Policy grad student Scott Hochfelder did a market survey for the cafe. "( - - -A - - - - - - - _ Hoc wheth mone gether Ra the ci "Hora Horac donat Univ Rackh Lip Rackh cafe's endow never out. Th drews for "H duced chfelder agreed. "It's not er (or not) this thing makes y but that it gets people to- r," he said. ckham held a contest to name afe and received 90 entries. ace and Mary's" is named after e and Mary Rackham. Trustees ed more than $6 million to the ersity in 1935 from Horace ham's trust fund. pschutz said she was glad Mary ham was also included in the name. "Mary actually gave the wment for the building and she gets any credit," she pointed ird-year art student Carrie An- designed advertising posters Horace and Mary's" and pro- the banner system hanging the cafe's ceiling. Prince, who designed the cafe, ne reason he chose the 16 col- as because graduate students requent the cafe come from dif- schools. ndrews and Prince decided to banner system because they d to bring the ceiling down and a sound buffer conducive to e cafe is open from 7-10:30 Sunday-Thursday. Coffee, fruit and pasteries are served. by Cherie Curry Daily Staff Writer University alumnus Judge Myron Wahls spoke to students and faculty at South Quad's Ambatana Lounge last night about the historical back- ground of the Supreme Court "Dred Scott Decision" case and the respon- sibilities of Black men in today's society. Wahls, who is currently an asso- ciate professor at Wayne State Uni- versity, told the group of about twenty that the court decision was instrumental in his decision to attend law school. The "Dred Scott Decision" ruling of 1857 denied Dred Scott, a freed slave, the right to the freedom for which he had partitioned. "From this infamous decision, earlier historians have elected to de- humanize him (Dred Scott) and make him the vehicle for dehumanizing all Black people," Wahls said. "In the years of deprivation, some slave turned his eyes up and said, 'Lord, I ain't tired yet." The mes- sage: A slave from the past was not about to give up his responsibility, the same responsibility that lies with the Black man of today. "You don't have to be the only one out there. There is strength in numbers.We need to find a common ground and pull ourselves together," Wahls pointed out. "I think that the thing that may prevent this is a lack of history." He said "What we've learned is the proposition - We are nothing until the least of us is something." Wahls then claimed his proposi- tion which successfully described the responsibility of the Black man through his transition from past to In undergrad. you meet a lot of from d people from engineering, English, Ian poli-sci...In grad school we don't said o meet so many people outside our ors w area of study and we all miss some- whofn thing because of that," Scott ferent Hochfelder said. "It's a good step in A building a community." use a Currently the cafe has only five wante tables but Lipschutz said they will create expand if it is a success. If the cafe Th makes a profit the money will go to p.m., serve graduate students. juice,f Superpowers MOSCOW (AP) - The United tweenI States and the Soviet Union made The headway yesterday toward new arms theird control agreements, officials on both would sides said. ranger The U.S. officials, speaking only they d on condition of anonymity, said Sec- fenses tetary of State James Baker and So- The viet Foreign Minister Eduard She- the con vardnadze made progress toward treaty, treaties to curb long-range nuclear Soviet weapons, ground troops, tanks and bachev combat aircraft in Europe, as well as Washi a ban on chemical weapons produc- a comp tion. could; Both Shevardnadze and Deputy tionsi Foreign Minister Alexander Bess- interes mertnykh echoed the positive U.S. Th appraisal. "The discussion of the dis- eviden armament problem is proceeding said th wvery well," Shevardnadze told Tass, navalf the Soviet news agency. the So Bessmertnykh, who specializes in if a dis U.S. relations, was quoted by Tass missil as saying both sides had presented Th new ideas; narrowing the gap be- to acc :'MSTV forum Judge Wahis The new graduate student cafe, Horace and Mary's, opened last Thursday. The decor was designed by Ian Prince make arms control progress present. "We live in a world where we are ringside observers. People say that the problems are so overwhelming, nothing can be done. If our roaris not sufficient enough to bring about change, then I suggest that we give more than we have ever given be- fore," Whals said. "We've got to stop thinking only of ourselves and start giving to others." their positions. e Soviets, meanwhile, dropped demand for a provision that allow them to scrap a long- missile-reduction agreement if etermined U.S. antimissile de- in space were illegal. e U.S. official who reported ncession acknowledged that the , which President Bush and I President Mikhail S. Gor- v plan to sign at their June ngton summit, would include mon escape clause. Either side abandon the missile restric- if they did not serve national St. e separate briefings produced ce of discord, also. Gerasimov e U.S. still refuses to consider force reductions, and he said viets would not sign the treaty spute over sea-launched cruise es was not resolved. e Bush administration refuses ept limitations on the weapons focuses carried aboard nuclear submarines and surface ships. The superpowers made progress on another issue during the talks. The Soviets said there was talk of a joint condemnation of Israel's resettlement of Jewish immigrants on the West Bank. "It's quite possible that as a re- sult of the Soviet-American talks a common viewpoint will be ex- pressed on this issue, condemning Israel's attempt to resettle immi- grants on someone else's occupied territory," Gennady, the Soviet For- eign Minister spokesperson said. "There are no differences between. the United States and us on this is- sue," he said. A half-dozen senior U.S. officials made no mention of the Jewish set- tlers in a separate briefing summing up more than seven hours of talks between Baker and Shevardnadze. Reported U.S. AIDS cases rise 9 % in 1989 Soviet Progressives react to political change 'on Arab-Israeli issue by Jody Weinberg Students representing two sides of the Arab-Israeli conflict debated the issue yesterday for the Michigan Student Television Student Forum. The audience was very vocal and participatory on both the Palestinian and Israeli side. "I was really impressed with the audience; they were really well versed in the issue and that con- tributed positively to the discus- sion," moderator Joe Hart, an LSA senior, said. "It's interesting to see how something which occurs thou- sands of miles awaysaffects people in very emotional ways." Representing the Palestinian in- terests were LSA seniors Dima Zala- timo, a member of the Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSC), and Betsy Esch, who was a member of the PSC delegation which went to occupied territories and was also part of an international delegation which went to the West Bank town of Beit Sahour. Speaking for the Israeli cause were engineering senior John Blow, a co-chair of TAGAR, a student group which promotes the state of Israel, and LSA junior Joseph Eng- lander, the chair of IMPAC, which tries to foster and improve positive US-Israeli relations through in- volvement in the American political process. The forum consisted of a ques- tion and answer period between the moderator and the panel members, followed by a discussion that was opened to the floor. Esch said, "Zionism is a move- ment that furthers the self-determina- tion of Jews, but not self-determina- tion of all people.and [Zionism] al- lows persecution of people which is fundamentally wrong." On the other hand Blow attributedI the Israeli's reluctance to negotiate: with the Palestinian Liberation Or- ganization (PLO) to the PLO's wishes to annihilate the Jews in ad- dition to ultimately "conquer Pales- tine step-by-step." Student Forum is sponsored by MSTV and will be aired on channel 9 starting this Sunday, February 11, at 10:05 p.m. Last night's forum will be aired on Sunday, February 18. Every Sunday night program will be replayed on Tuesdays at 3:30, p.m. MOSCOW (AP) - Communist maverick Boris Yeltsin and progres- sive activists said yesterday the party's decision to renounce its legal claim on power is not enough to end Soviet political repression and cen- tralized control. "It is necessary to eliminate (Communist) party organizations in the army, the police, the KGB, the courts, and all the state institutions," Yuri Mityunov, a spokesperson for one would-be opposition party, the Democratic Union. Yeltsin was the sole member of the party's policy-making Central Committee to oppose the political reforms Wednesday. He said they failed to go far enough. "I had grounds to vote against. But I think, however, that the plat- form represents if not a step then a half-step forward, and that lessens the tension before the (party) Congress," he said in an interview in his office near the Kremlin. He recommended the formation of a second party if the Communist Party fails to excise conservatives at the Congress to be held in early summer. Yeltsin was a keynote speaker at the largest pro-democracy rally in decades at the foot of Red Square last Sunday. Several hundred thousand people rallied and demanded the party abandon its guaranteed leading role in Soviet society. At the Central Committee meet- ing that ended Wednesday, the party did just that, approving President Mikhail Gorbachev's party platform that calls for revoking the party's constitutional guarantee in favor of a multiparty system where Commu- nists would have to compete for power. "The discussion was very hot. The proposals were diametrically opposed. It was not easy," Yeltsin said, gesturing expansively before departing to take the political tem- perature among activists in Len- ingrad. Mityunov said pressure for re- form is now moving to the street and pointed to the growing number of incidents of angry crowds across the Soviet Union demanding the ouster of hard-line local Commu- nists leaders. Party secretaries in Volgograd, Tyumen, Chernigov and Sverdlovsk were removed in recent weeks, and activists said 6,000 people gathered in front ofnthe party headquarters in Donetsk on Wednesday with a simi- lar demand. Religious Services CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Church Chaplaincy) 218 N. Division (at Catherine) SUNDAY SCHEDULE Holy Eucharist-5 p.m. in St. Andrews Preacher: The Rev. Dr. Virginia Peacock Celebrant: The Rev. Susan McGarry 6:00 p.m.-Supper and conversation with Dr. Jean-Marie from Detroit WEEKDAYS Morning Prayer, 7:30 a.m., M-F Evening Prayer, 5:15 p.m., M-F Call 665-0606 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH and AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER Huron Street (between State & Division) SUNDAYS: Worship-955 Bible Study Groups-11:20 WEDNESDAYS: Student Fellowship-5:30 Supper and Bible Study For information, call 663-9376 Robert B. Wallace & Mark Wilson, pastors ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH 331 Thompson Street Weekend liturgies: Sat. 5p.m., Sun. 8:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 12 noon & 5 p.m. Confessions, Fri. 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. Catholic Update Class, Mon. nights, 7 to 8:30 p.m. Topic for Feb. 12: "Catholicism's Understanding of Christ and the Redemption" Series on Second Vatican Council, Feb. 14, ATLANTA (AP) - The number of new AIDS cases in the United States rose just 9 percent in 1989, but the disease is spreading faster among heterosexuals, newborns, women and Southerners, federal AIDS specialists reported yesterday. A total of 35,238 AIDS cases were reported in 1989 by the na- tional Centers for Disease Control, compared with 32,196 reported dur- ing 1988. That 9 percent increase is easily the slowest since the spread of AIDS began in the early 1980s. For example, AIDS was-up 34 percent in 1988 and 60 percent in 1987. "This is somewhat of a continu- ing trend," said Dr. Ruth Berkelman, chief of the AIDS surveillance fQr the Atlanta-based center. "There has been a leveling in reported cases." The center attempts to tabulate AIDS cases according to when they were first diagnosed. In the latest 12- month period of that survey the an- nual increase was similarly modest, a 14 percent rise over the precediirg 12 months, center diagnosticiaOts said.b' The two tabulations differ some- what in part because of case report- ing delays, revisions in the standaras for reporting of AIDS cases other factors. Graduating? Moving out of the Dorm' Is Your House Too Cluttered? 4Making Room for New Things? 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