0 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 25, 1990 SAPAC Continued from page 2 my ass. I stopped walking and he passed me and I kicked him. Kick back!" she said. Amy, another audience volunteer, said she was angry and full of hate for herself and the people with whom she grew up. "Talk to someone that cares about you. And for the men that are here tonight, God bless you. There are so many people here, it isn't the mood anywhere else. I hope people aren't afraid to take it beyond this room, to dorms and classrooms." A male survivor of sexual abuse by a person he thought was his men- tor said he now thinks of that person as his tormentor. "Yes, it happens to men. If you're a man and a survivor, it's not your fault. If you're a survivor, you don't have to be ashamed," he said. Counselors and volunteers at SAPAC staged a narrated play of the incidents that led up to the Michigan state legislative law prohibiting rapists to sue their "victims" before the criminal case is tried. Counselors read several poems written by women which expressed their feelings about femininity and societies. Labor Secretary Dole Calvin and Hobbes W4ELL, tF I &TIsk ' ©u ROCKJET- BUT.' L GUESS& roe Y*TBE JNOR O ME A M'ORE! SEE, I'M W4EA9.1% AASK OMANTE BAIK OF MY NERD! NOM" IOUjCAN~T IU.. WCI4 yw M FA4 CING, 9 N ( CT SNAK UP FRMMO INE. FWNM11 THCWARTED ~FOUR ?AWOMN RFY At10 TM4T PAOLE AR SE k R THAN ANIMALS ! W CMM~ by Bill Watterson tbji 0 resigns WASHINGTON (AP) - Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole, the first member of President Bush's Cabinet to resign, said yesterday she was leaving for new challenges and not because of "totally erroneous" re- ports she lacked influence at the White House. Mrs. Dole, the highest-ranking woman in the Bush administration, said that after 25 years of govern- ment service, she was looking for- ward to focusing on humanitarian causes at her new job as president of the American Red Cross. She denied she was frozen out by White House policy-makers. Aides and union leaders have said she had little clout at Bush's Cabinet table, C abinet and many labor policy decisionsa were left to Chief of Staff John Su-S nunu. "I can't imagine who was saying C this... Most definitely, I feel very much a part of the circle that's mak- b ing the decisions here at the White 1 House," Mrs. Dole said after an-s nouncing her resignation with the President at her side. 4 Mrs. Dole, the wife of Senate C Republican leader Bob Dole, also P denied she might use the Red Crosss position to lay the groundwork for r long-term political goals. h "I'm on my way to the RedZ Cross. I have no plans to run forC anything," she said. Rumors have d been rampant that she would eventu- P post ally step down to run in 1992 for the* Senate seat now held by Democrat Terry Sanford of her native North Carolina. She did not rule out some future bid for elective office. "You learn in this town never to say never," she said. Possible successors include, Constance Newman, head of the Office of Personal Management; Rep. Lynn Martin (R-Ill.), should she lose her bid for the Senate in the Nov. 6 election; Elaine Chao, who holds the No. 2 job at the Transportation Department; and Constance Horner, undersecretary at the Health and Human Services De- partment. IWNW,-u 0m 1990 Universal Press Syndicatel .- I I'm - I .- ..- Nuts and Bolts TE RpOPF7D rHE G CW. 'Ys, z F-(P 7ANEA TH-AT THE ANTI sE-mrflc VNAL15M PUT You. UNDE.R AN UNRmTAE AMOUcNT OFSTES BEAUSE'YOU'RE. A FtLDbUT°YO .P t*J TO PROP oug C)-N, VANDAL-/ 4n %lLEVON... 0 c -- . _ . _ by Judd Winick YOU HAP NO R&HT!! HEY, PEOPLE GO TO HELL FOR PUNCHING CLOWNS!! A LAWyER. Mistake delays distribution of new student directories HOSTAGES Continued from page 1 on the flight home from Iraq. He said meals consisted of rice and stale bread Thompson, an engineering com- pany manager, said he was among 15 foreigners held as "human shields" at an Iraqi armaments fac- tory. Saddam had kept some Western detainees at strategic locations to guard against attack. "We told the guards, unless you do something...we are going to have a disturbance, Thompson said. by Gil Renberg Daily Staff Reporter The distribution of student direc- tories, which was scheduled to begin today, is postponed three weeks be- cause of the exclusion of thousands of students. No first-year students or transfer students were listed in the directory - which lists the name, phone number, home address, class stand- ing and school of enrollment for each student. In addition, last year's graduated class was not removed ZINN Continued from page 1 ever before that students can play a large part in." The speech also detailed the his- tory of student movements. The 1930s were a period when economic realities set in and the threat of war became apparent. The 1960s were a period in which "young people came alive and helped extradite a nation from war." In the 1980s, movements for the divest- ment of funds in South Africa and from the directory, which is produced by the University's Student Publica- tions department. It is not yet clear how the mis- take happened. Liz Witzler, the of- fice coordinator for Student Publica- tions said she received a computer- ized tape from the University on which all the data for this year's stu- dents were stored. She had the data on the tape typeset, she said, then the directories were printed in North Carolina by University Directories, a company which specializes in such the halt of CIA recruiting were some examples of activism. Although these weren't large movements, they may set the stage for a great student movement in the '90s, he said. Zinn said he believes it is dan- gerous for campus police to have guns, because even small demonstra- tions may scare officers into resort- ing to force. Members of the audience agreed withr Zinn. "I am concerned with cops hav- ing guns on campus. Zinn made me realize that bureaucracies tend to solve problems by force," LSA se- nior Richard Drake said. "Everything he said was relevant. publications. Attempts to locate the source of the error have been fruitless. No one has decided whether the data on the magnetic tape were wrong or these data were extracted improperly. An employee at the University's Data@ Systems Center refused comment. To remedy the error, Student Publications is printing addenda to include the missing students. It will be distributed with the directories beginning Nov. 14. Directories are available to all students for free. It is encouraging to see that we are not an isolated group," said MSA President Jennifer Van Valey. LSA junior Erika Sumoff said, "He put so much energy into the au- dience. He fought for the oppressed. We are fighting for the oppressed." Although most people were pleased with Zinn's lecture, LSA junior Jon Jurva said, "Zinn should have focused more on the currents issues now rather than reminiscingg about the '60s'" Zinn closed his speech with some advice for current activists: "Don't assume people are sleeping. They will wake up." I don't be left out!. a ' .... SENIORS This is it! Here's your chance to get your picture in the 1991 MichiganEnsian yearbook Our photographer is back! Get your Senior Portrait taken October 22 through October 26 on the second floor of the UGLi. Don't forget your appointment and your $3.00 sitting fee! If you have any questions, call 764-0561. Health Care Clinic of Ann Arbor 3012 Packard Road " 971-1970 LEE Continued from page 1 thought about going into civil engi- neering; I thought it would be very satisfying to build bridges, but then I thought about how many bridges really get built. "I knew I'd like to make wine, but for that I would need some capi- tal that I just didn't have. And then there was chemistry, which I had done best in while in school, plus the fact that my education would be free while I worked as a T.A. - something I think few students real- ize, but that really should be a crite- ria." Once that decision was made, Lee was off to the University of Chicago, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1985. From there Lee went on to work as a native fellow in France and Germany. He returned to the United States in 1988, and immediately began to work at the University of Michigan, researching solid state chemistry, teaching Chemistry 126, and earning almost instant respect from his col- leagues. "He's very bright, imaginative... He lives for his job and is a very ef- fective teacher," notes his colleague Prof. D. Coucouvanis. His laboratory work, according to graduate student Stephen Patton, "is really exceptional. His work in solid state chemistry could really be Nobel Prize-winning stuff. And he has an ability to explain it with such sim- plicity." When confronted with praise, Lee becomes quite uncomfortable. "It can be very bad to think you'resomething special," he com- ments. As far as his teaching goes, he will accept no compliments. "There's not a lecture that goes by that I don't think, 'This went badly,' or 'I did that wrong...' When you teach 350 people, what some want is fundamentally different from what others need. "It's weird. You want to work to@ see your students develop to a point where they don't need a teacher... You will only be able to measure if they have learned by what they know ten years from now." It's For You! The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 U.S. mail and $28 on campus, for fall only $22.00 U.S. mail. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379, Sports 747-3336, Cir- culation 764-0558, Classified advertising 764-0557, Display advertising 764-0554, Billing 764-0550 01 I c a- .0 Today - 9 0 only!. EDITOFAL STAFF: Editor in Chief Managing Editor News Editors Opinion Editor Assocate Editors Weekend Editors Photo Editor Noah Finkel Kristine LaLonde Diane CookIan Hoffman Josh Mitnik, Noele Vance David Sdhwartz Slpen Henderson, L Matthew hWler Ronan Lynh Kevin Woodson Jose Jkuarez Sports Editor Assodite Editors Arts Editors Books Rim Music Teter Bike Gil Andy Gottesman, David Hyman, Eric Lemont, Ryan Schreiber, Jeff Sheran Kristin Palm, Annete Petusso Cardyn Poor Jon Bik, Brent Edwards Pete Shapiro May Beth Barber We've got your number in the University of Michigan Student Telephone Directory. Michigan Union 11:OOam-4:OOpm News: Josephine Ballenger. Michelle Clayton, Heather Fee, Juli Foster, Jay Gara, Henry Gddblatt.Jmnnruhr Hi, ChdiswKialooetra, Amianda Neuman, Shaun Patel, Melissa Peerless, Dan Poux, Ma Pullam, David Rhekigold, GO Renberg, Bethany Roh ertinJon Rosenihal, Sarah Schweitzer, Amabel Vered, Stefarde Vine's, Ken Walker, Donna Woodwet. Opinion: Tom Abowd, Russel Balimore, Mark Buchan, Mike Fischer, Leso Heibru, Andrew Levy, Jennifer Matson, Chris Nordstrom, Dawn PaulinsId, Glyn Washington, Kevin Woodson. Sports: Ken Ariz, Jason Bank, Andy Brown, Mie Bess, Wait Buzu, Jeff Cameron, Slave Cohen, Theodore Cox, Andy DeKorle, Mat Dodge, Josh Dubow, Jeni Durst, Scott Ersitine, Pil Green, R.C. Heaton, David Kraft, Jeff Lieberman, ich Levy, Albert Lin, Rod Loewenbhal, Adam Miler, John Niyo, Sarah OSbum, Malt Renni, David Shedter, Ken Sigura, Eric Skar, Andy Stabile, Dan Zoch. Arts: Mark Bneit, Greg Baise, Andy Cah, Beth Coquit, Jenie Dahinar, Michael Paul Fischer, Forrest Green 1II, Mke Kolody, Mice Kuniavsky, lizabeth Lenhard, David Lubliner, Mike Moitor, Ronald Scott, Lauren Turetsky, Sue Uselmann, lrm Yaged, Nabeel Zuberi, Photo.yAnh M. Cro, Jennifer Dwietz, Amy Feldman, Kdssy Goodman, Kenneth Smoler, Weekend: Phil Cohen, Miguel Cruz, Dcnna ladipado, Jesse Waker, Fred Zinn. 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