WCBN kicks off 'Dreams' by Rob Kraft "The genius of African-American music will redeem this nation from rubble, many, many millennia from how... Turn your dial to 88.3 FM this February 22-25 end take a heating implement to it 'til it won't budge." With these inspired words, University radio station WCBN begins a week-long program of African-Ameri- can music in conjunction with Black History Month en- kitled, "Listen to the Color of Your Dreams." The program will cover a wide variety of African- American music - everything from jazz to pop to reg- he- and will feature exclusive interviews with Mal- *colm X's daughter Attallah Shabazz, tonight at 7 p.m. Prince may also give an exclusive interview to ;WCBN Saturday at 9 p.m., said LSA sophomore Mark piney, facilitator of this week's programs. . Station manager and LSA senior Brad Heavner said tlje program is intended "to show that American history can't be dealt with without talking about African-Amer- can history." Heavner said the program is part of WCBN's contin- uing tradition "to expose various different ideas - *racism, homophobia - and open up people's minds. Sometimes it takes a sledgehammer." The program is "an intense bit of programming deal- ng directly with African-American culture," he said. (It) serves the purpose of bringing all cultures together ,nd placing them in (the) perspective" of the African- American cultural experience, he added. "The program is overflowing because there are so nany people fighting to get in on the four days," Riney said. "Even those people in (the program) have more ideas than are able to fit." Throughout the program's planning stages Heavner laid WCBN's staff has shown enthusiasm for the pro- ject. "We've seen a positive response from (WCBN em- ployees) to put something together that is really good," he said. Both Heavner and Riney said much of American cul- Jure fails to recognize the significance of African-Amer- scan contributions. "We're demonstrating what we (at WCBN) have al- Ways believed in," Riley said, "which is the inherent beauty and diversity of all the races of the world." WCBN is on the air 24 hours a day. "Listen to the Color of Your Dreams" will start early Thursday morn- ing and last until midnight Sunday. The Michiga MSA an Daily - Thursday, February 22, 1990 - Page 3 commission Rowing for MDAS Mary Lembke, left, and Suzanne Miller collect money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Both are members of Michigan's Women's Crew, which is sponsoring a Row- A-Thon this Saturday to raise money for MDA. Guerillas issue death threat to Americans in Colombia gauges cli women oi b Diane Cook omen's Issues Reporter A booklet revealing the climate for women on campus will be pub- lished this April from questionnaire results collected by the Michigan Student Assembly Women's Issues Commission. Nearly 800 questionnaires have already been gathered from Univer- sity students across campus. Commission Vice-Chair Nicole Carson, an LSA junior, said the commission will print the booklet to evaluate and "raise awareness" of the campus' atmosphere for women. Carson said students' personal experiences will be published in es- say form - to humanize the study and to contrast typical statistical analyses. "It's easy to argue with statistics; it's not so easy to argue with real experiences," Carson said. Carson said responses, elicited from both men and women, have. varied. "Some women have said that they're very comfortable," Carson said. "Then we'll get some incredible stories of women constantly being intimidated by men and being un- comfortable by professors using sex- ist examples." Commission Chair Jennifer Van Valey, an LSA sophomore, said the study could offer documentation to instigate change in the classroom, particularly in the area of gender-neu- tral language. Van Valey said she would like to see the booklet used as a teaching- tool for faculty and teaching assis- tants to acquaint them with the per- vasive problems of sexism on cam- pus. [mate for r campus A . "We're not just dealing withiIt really makes me mad when you -gay chairman,'" she said. "The probltn is what that relates to in a larger sense - women in a male-centered classroom and how that makes then feel." Carson said it will be difficult tQ estimate printing and distribution costs until the commission has compiled the study. The booklet will be accessible to all students and facT ulty and will be funded by the Presi, 'We're not just dealing with 'It really makes me mad when you say chairman.' The problem is ... women in a male-centered classroom and how that makes them feel' -Jennifer Van Valey MSA's Women's Issues Committee Chair dent's Advisory Commission on Women's Issues. "From the beginning it was a project we supported," said Carol Hollenshead, chair of the president's commission. "We are concerned about the academic climate at, the University for women and are inter- ested in these experiences." Carson said the study reflectsg thi MSA commission's change in fonu§ from the coordination of womet'§ issues groups to the gathering ainid dissemination of information 'dr these issues. BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Americans hired extra guards and stayed close to home yesterday because of a guerilla "death to grin- gos" threat, and the government promised spe- cial measures to protect them. "Every American client I've got was on the telephone this morning asking for more guards," the owner of a security company that protects several U.S. companies. A U.S. oil executive said his company had canceled all trips outside Bogota by American employees. The National Liberation Army, known by it's Spanish initials ELN, declared Tuesday that all U.S. interests in Colombia were its James Donnelly of Detroit and David Kent of Indianapolis still are held, but the guerrillas freed the Rev. Francis Amico Ferarri of Rochester, N.Y. a Roman Catholic priest. Americans on the U.S. Embassy staff were told yesterday to stay home except for neces- sary trips and were being escorted to and from work by armed guards, an embassy employee said. The State Department already had considered Colombia so dangerous it would only send people who were single or married and willing to live apart from their families. Diplomats get hazard pay for service in Colombia. No firm figures are available on the number of Americans in Colombia but past U.S. Em- bassy estimates have been about 20,000. military targets. It has kidnapped1 three Americans in a week. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today State dept. releases Czech leader speaks _ % t +n f. -:. st t s.y.A 'i. ^u t ! i M ' s human rights report to House and Senate Meetings Socially Active Latino Student Association - 7:30 p.m. in Angell Hall Rm. 221 Earth Day Organizing Com- mittee - 7 p.m. on Union 4th floor Michigan Video Yearbook -- - meeting at 7 p.m. in the Welker Room of the Union Amnesty International --- cam- pus group meeting 6 p.m. MLB 2012 UM Cycling --- team meeting and rollers riding 6 p.m. in the Sports Coliseum UCAR --- general body meeting at 6 p.m. in the Union Kuenzel Room American Association of University Professors (AAUP). -- open chapter meeting on "Athletics and Academia" at noon in the Michigan League Michigan yRoom Speakers "Cross-cultural Friendships and Relationships: Risks and Rewards" --- part of the Global Friendship and Dating Series a brown bag discussion at noon in the International Center "Political Change in Chiefdom Societies: Cycling in the Late Prehistoric Southeastern United States" - -- David Anderson speaks noon-1 p.m. in the Natural Science Museum Room 2009 "How to Get a Summer Job in Biology" --- Kerin Borland speaks at 8 p.m. in the Natural Science Bldg. 4th floor seminar rooms "A Historical Perspective of Student Movements in the People's Republic of China" --- a forum noon-1:30 p.m. in Room 2233 of the School of Education Bldg. "Labor and Popular Organizations Under Attack in El Salvador" --- a talk at 8 p.m. in Angell Hall Room 35 "Namibian Independence: The Elections and Beyond" -- - Siba Grovogui and Paquettta Palmer speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Kuenzel Room Resource Ecology & Management Seminar Series -. -- Phillip Grime speaks about exneriVmental studtiesgof nilant "Foundations for a Natural Science Paradigm in the Social Sciences" --- Gary Johnson speaks at 4 p.m. in the Rackhams3rd Floor E. Lecture Room "Judea and Samaria: Israel's Key to Survival" --- Ray Curtis speaks at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel "Christianity, Israel, and the Intifada" --- Clem Reams speaks at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel Furthermore Black History Month Arts at Mid-day --- Darcy McConnell reads her poetry at 12:15 p.m. in the Union Kuenzel Room Women's Club Lacrosse - practice 4-6 p.m. in the Coliseum (5th and Hill) Northwalk --- the north campus night time walking service runs from 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in Bursley 2333 or call 763-WALK Safewalk --- the night time safety walking service runs from 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in UGLi 102 or call 936-1000 ECB Peer Writing Tutors --- peer writing tutors available for help on papers 7-11 p.m. in the Angell/Haven and 611 Church St. computing centers Career Planning and Placement --- careers in law 6:10-7 p.m. Union Pendleton room; summer job fair workshop 6:10-7 p.m. CP&P library Free Tutoring --- for all lower level science and engineering classes 8-10 p.m. in UGLi Room 307 Oxford Housing --- open house 7-9 p.m. at Oxford housing (Geddes across from the Arb) Listen to the Color of Your Dreams --- a WCBN (88.3) tribute to African-American music 9 a.m.-11 p.m. The Inspector General --- Nikolai Gogol's play performed by the University Players at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League's Mendelssohn Theatre Deathtrap --- the UM Law School Arts Committee performs the play at 8 p.m. in the School of Education's Schorling Auditorium Israel Information Davs-- i r t WASHINGTON (AP) - Crack- downs in China and Cuba drew strong criticism from the State De- partment in its annual human rights report to Congress yesterday in con- trast to praise for "a remarkable opening of the political process" in the Soviet Union. The human rights situation on the West Bank and in Gaza, where Palestinian Arabs are in the 27th month of an uprising against Israeli occupation, was described as "a source of deep concern." Assistant Secretary Richard Schifter, the principal compiler of the 1,641-page document, contrasted suppression in China with giant human rights advances in Eastern Europe. He told a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee that the crackdown on pro-democracy forces in China last year "put into reverse, in very short order, much of the significant movement in China during the last 10 years." There was no indication, how- ever, that the Bush administration was about to harden its policy to- ward China, which several members of Congress have likened to kid- gloves treatment. Schifter said the United States must maintain ties to Beijing in order to bring about im- provements. In Cuba, the report said President Fidel Castro "has taken or fabricated opportunities to harass, detain or imprison" 50 human rights advc - cates while the Marxist government "silenced many of its leading domes- tic critics." The picture of the Soviet Union was brighter. Under President Mikhail Gorbachev, the report said, "the past year witnessed a remarkable opening up of the political proce s and improvements in human rights practices." Still, the report said, the Soviet Union "has considerable distance to go before it will meet the standards set forth in the Helsinki Final Act" of 1975, a 35-nation pledge to foster human rights which included the Soviet Union. Though the top leadership no longer fosters anti-Semitism and ap- pears embarrassed by it, "there has been a sharp increase in popular ex- pressions of anti-Semitic attitudes," the report said. Share the news, 19 ait WASHINGTON (AP) - Czechoslovak President Vaclav Havel told Congress yesterday his nation is "returning to Europe" from decades of Soviet domination and asked lawmakers to help by pressing the Soviet Union to stay on its own road to democracy. In a speech to a joint meeting of the House and Senate that was more philosophical than political, the playwright-turned-president also said Americans need to learn, along with his country, "how to put moral- ity ahead of politics, science and economics." Havel, who reluctantly accepted the popular mandate of his country to lead during its time of rapid tran- sition, received a two-minute stand- ing ovation from the standing-room- only crowd in the House chamber, and appeared somewhat stiff and. surprised at the reception. As he began to speak, U.S. tennis; star and former Czechoslovak citizen Martina Navratilova dabbed at her: eyes with a handkerchief in the top: row of the visitor's gallery. Speaking through a translator,* Havel called Czechoslovakia one of Eastern Europe's "wayward chil- dren" and said it wants to coordinates its return to the economic and politi- cal mainstream with Hungary, Poland and other nations emerging from 40 years of Soviet domination." The members of Congress came to their feet when Havel said his country's peaceful revolution was: inspired by the U.S. Constitution,: Bill of Rights and Declaration of In- dependence. "The inspire us to be: citizens," he said. 764-0553 News Arts 763-0379 b o 764-0562 News and Opinion 747-3334 News ; 763-0376 Sports 763-2459 News '747-3336 Sports w a m "Reativelyspeaking the, best deal on gold, p To $80 . d Rings , nce ' Char e Ord( nstant Grad u Getahadofth c 7pti o wthcaee THnE ROAD TO SUCCESS ' -- Get ahead of the cornpetition with career;2 preparation and academic enrichment at Rutgers-New Brunswick. --. . Certificate in Business Communication .Certificate in Business Fundamentals S. 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