Man robs Domino's Semployee at bank Police said an unknown man robbed a Domino's Pizza employee as he was miaking a deposit at a banchl o fCoerica early yesterday morning. The Domino's employee told po- W lice he was depositing an envelope with $1,200 at around 2 a.m. to the Comerica bank on N. Huron Park- way when a thin man in his 20s wearing "black-rimmed glasses, a black flight jacket and jeans," bran- dished a "lock-blade hunting knife" and demanded the envelope. The employee told police he threw the envelope to the man who ran to his "rusty, '70s vintage car" and drove off. -by Mike Sobel Chrysler kicks-off *newad campaign WASHINGTON (AP) - Chrysler Corp. chairman Lee Iacocca kicked off a campaign yesterday to convince Americans that the Japanese do not have a monopoly on quality automobiles. "Forathe life of me, I don't know * why there seems to be this national inferiority complex," Iacocca told re- porters on the first leg of a six-city tour to showcase Chrysler products. He spoke in a hotel balsoom before a display of Chrysler autos ranging from the minivan and Jeep to sports and luxury cars. "Every time I pick up the paper, I seem to read another story that rein- forces the idea that anything made overseas, including Europe, is somehow better than anything made in America," he said. "We're not go- ing to let that kind of crap go un- challenged any more. We're going to speak out." COKELY Continued from Page 1 not be true," Harris said. "But we're talking about emotion and history, and it's really hard to argue about certain things." Cokely was fired as an aide to Chicago Mayor Eugene Sawyer in May of 1988 for "racist and anti- Semitic remarks," according to The Chicago Tribune. I 'Pictures' The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 22, 1990 - Page 5 examines the American impoverished by Catherine Fugate "American Pictures," a dramatic study of poverty and racism in mod- ern America, was shown last night to a standing-room-only crowd in Rackham Auditorium. The show, presented in slides and narration, de- tailed the travels of Jacob Holdt through an impoverished America. Holdt, who introduced the presen- tation, said his curiosity for Ameri- can life had been aroused after being held at gunpoint upon arriving in the United States from Denmark. Throughout his travels, Holdt dis- covered what he identified as "a side of society that most of us do not want to deal with" and that being the underclass and the victims of racism. Holdt combined the pictures he had taken during his travels with nar- ration and music to create a presenta- tion that reflected the modern plight of impoverished blacks throughout the nation. However, he maintained that the show "is not about Blacks. It is a show about oppression." The slide show was divided into two parts, the first focusing upon the poor of the rural South, and the second dealing with the urban im- poverished of the North. Holdt said the show was an ex- periment because it put the audience through a form of oppression them- selves so they could understand the "American Pictures was described as both powerful and disturbing," said Michael Ruyan, an organizer of the presentation. "I am surprised with the contin- ued slave treatment in the South," said LSA junior Anne Avgerin. "American Pictures" was spon- sored by the Student Coalition for Holdt combined the pictures he had taken during his travels with narration and music to create a presentation that reflected the modern plight of impoverished blacks throughout the nation 0 plight of the lower class. "It is very important to put ourselves in their shoes," he said. At the end of the show, Holdt presented a list of emotional words that the audience was asked to com- pare with their own feelings. REGENT Continued from Page 1 "Tom lost in the statewide elec- tion," Baker said. "(But) he is and was a great gentleman. He invited my wife Marilyn and I over to his house. It was a great thing." Roach won a seat in the following election. Roach has few regrets about his time in office. But "nobody makes every decision right," he said. He lists the turmoil on campus three Social Awareness, RHA, and the LSA Student Government. Though the show has been presented at the University in earlier years, this is the first time the Student Coalition for Social Awareness has sponsored it. years ago when several racial inci- dents occurred as one of the most un- fortunate points of his career on the board. On the other hand, his greatest impact on the University will be re- flected in the school's leadership, Roach said. Roach participated in the selection of former University Presi- dent Harold Shapiro as well asDud- erstadt. Before leaving office Roach hopes to finish developing a pro- gram to recognize faculty service. Roach AP Photo Playing A Berlin child plays on the remains of the Wall in front of West Berlin's Reichstag building yesterday. A wicked farce of mistaken identity from Russia's great comic writer and dramatist Nikolai Gogol (Dead Souls, Diary of a Madman, The Overcoat). _ __ _ "Roosevelt's paralegal program was my stepping- stone to a rewarding career." Anne Hillard Legal Assistant Litigation." Real Estate Corporations " General Practice Estates, Trusts & Wills Employee Benefit Plans " Largest A.B.A.-approved program n Ilinois . Effective employement assistance " Three-month day and six-month evening classes " Loop, Arlington Heights, Oak Brook and Olympia Fields locations " Student loans for qualified appli- cants " On campus Feb. 27,1990, see your career placement office for details For a brochure and your invatation to an information session, write or call: --I ~~The Inspector General University Players Directed by Richard Klautsch Mendelssohn Theatre Feb. 22, 23, 24 at 8 PM Feb. 25 at 2 PM Tickets are $10 and $7; Call 764-0450 or 763-TKTS. Student seating is $5 with ID at the League Ticket Office in the Michigan League only. "{ r, t « ., I(I Rooesevelt University * Lawyers Assiatant P'rora 430 S. Michigan Avenue Chicago, It. 60605 312-341-3882 Name Cit State Zip I Month DP NI l tntI C Join Procomp Computer Products at COMPUFAIR '90 Michigan Union Ball Room February 22 & 23 I L Find Out What's New In Computer Technology Today! Procomp Will Be There With Some Great NEW -= HEWLETT-PACKARD Products! HP Vectra ES PC HP Desk Michi Thurs Writer Printer HI, LaseJet II Printer 4 Join In The Fun! gan Union Ball Room day & Friday 8 - 4:30 - . . - - .t _ ____...1._... . r P