Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Monday, October 28, 1991 Ecumenical conference discusses Filipino peace campaign proposal by Natasha Goburdhun Over the weekend, participants in the Seventh Annual National Ecumenical Conference on the Philippines (NECP) met at St. Andrews Episcopal Church to dis- cuss the proposal for their "Sustainable Peace Campaign." The campaign is dedicated to finding non-violent solutions for violations of human rights and in- fractions of justice in the Philippines. One conference speaker, Leonor Briones, focused on the elimination of the Filipino debt as a way to pur- sue the groups' goals. Briones, a professor of Public Administration at the University of the Philippines, said the large Filipino debt is an obstacle to sus- tainable peace and can only be alle- viated by increasing their inflow of resources. Other problems she cited in- cluded increasing interest rates, poor governmental programs which have led to a severe recession, and an increasing outflow of resources. She stressed that in the current situation, more than 70 percent of the Filipino population lives below the poverty line. The other speaker, Richard Falk, an international law and practice professor at Princeton University, said a major impediment to peace is poor international relations. Falk said that the Cold War in Eastern Europe may have subsided, but that there is still a cold war waging in Asia. He expressed hope, however, that a peaceful arrangement could soon be found. "A non-violent solution for conflict is more promising today than at any point in the last twenty years. This reflects both the mili- tary stalemate and learned experi- ence on all sides that military solu- tion is not going to work," he said. Conference participants included professors, students and church members, both American and Filipino, from across the country. Their common link was that they have all lived and worked in the Philippines. T1lE MICHIGAN DAILY GE T THE FACTS GET THE DAILY Call GET THE FACTS 764-0552 GET THE DAILY GET THE FACTS more GET THE DAILY GET THE FACTS GET THE DAILY NEWS eSPORTS ARTS OPINION & PHOTO maseEhfsn' Cool tunes Alan Blumberg, an employee for Rounder Record Distributor, examines the merchandise at Tower Records on South University. He said he was helping the store obtain "hard-to find" music. 01 "*N KCP Continued from page 1 chance to introduce a diversity of ideas which she sees as important for the future. "We're getting into a global so- FOR JUNIOR NURSING STUDENTS A SUMMER STUDENT NURSING EXPERIENCE AT MAYO FOUNDATION HOSPITALS Here is your opportunity to work at Mayo Medical Center for the summer. Summer Ill is a paid, supervised hospital work experience at Saint Marys Hospital and Rochester Methodist Hospital, both part of Mayo Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota. You are eligible for Summer Ill after your junior year of a four year baccalaureate nursing program. It includes experience on medical and surgical nursing units or in operating rooms. Application Deadline: December 1, 1991. For more information contact: Friends of the Ann Arbor Public Library .l BOOK SHOP RE-OPENS Fri., Nov.1 X0.0 jPreview Sa (join at the Sat., N Sun., Nov ANN PUBLIC 343 .. ..(fowl T'i S' 1--5:30-8:30 pm ale for Members door for $5.00) ciety, so there's going to be diver- sity no matter what, and we've got to be prepared for it," she said. Students and professors said that the program is also used to help mi- nority recruitment. Nancy Thomas, assistant direc- tor of the Michigan Program in Child Development and Social Policy, said her department invited a group of students from Western High School in Detroit to hear visit- ing professor and University gradu- ate Ricardo Romo speak on his re- search on desegregation in the Southwest. LSA first-year student Norma Garza was a part of that group. She said seeing Romo speak was an in- spiring experience both for her and the other students there. "It really gave me a boost to see a Hispanic like myself having gone so far and done so much," Garza said. "I think cutting the program would deprive other potential in- coming students of the knowledge of how other people have benefitted from graduating from the University of Michigan," she added Professors who have taken ad- vantage of the program said the funding cuts will make such oppor- tunities harder to come by. "The people we've brought in may have been able to come without the funding, but we wouldn't have been able to do the things we did. For example we couldn't have been able to bring those kids in from Detroit," Thomas said. At the moment, it is unclear whether the funding will be re- stored. Charles Moody, vice provost for Minority Affairs, said he hopes the University will be able to meet all its outstanding commitments, but is unsure about the long-term future of the program. "I don't know whether the veto is just for one year, or whether the program is gone for good," he said. McAdoo Poole said the future of the Visiting Professors Program will depend on student reaction. "If enough attention is raised, if enough people really protest and fight for this program, it will continue. But The program has madepadifference in my world ... I think it's extremely important that it continue' -Robin Soler Rackham Student if people just let it slide, then it won't come back." One person who is not willing to "let it slide" is third-year Rackham student Robin Soler. Soler, a founding member of Students for Research on Latinos, a group which uses KCP funds to bring speakers to the University, is organizing a campaign to send post- cards to Engler's office protesting the veto. "We have barely any faculty of color on campus and the KCP pro- gram is one of the few ways for de- partments to bring faculty of color in," she said. "The program has made a difference in my world, and in the world of the people I know ... I think it's extremely important that it continue." S ov. 2 -- 10-4 . 3 -- 1:30-4:30 1 I 4 ARBOR C LIBRARY S. 5TH ver level) ma O Mayo Medical Center Nursing Recruitment P.O. Box 6057 Rochester, Minnesota 55903-6057 1-800-247-8590 1-507-255-4314 Mvayo Founfdation is anff tirmiative actiion and eI qual oppfortunfity' educator ad 1employer. S! *Office2 UAC/VIEWPO INT LECTURES INVITES YOU TO: STUDENT SOAPBOX An Open Forum on Important Issues. RALLY Continued from page 1 confused about the paper's advertis- ing policy. The Daily business staff's gen- eral advertising policy states: "The Michigan Daily reserves the right to decline, discontinue or revise any advertisement found unsuitable for publication and to set the words 'paid advertisement' above any ads." The Daily's editorial staff has no control or say in this decision mak- ing process, Gottesman said. "I don't support printing every- thing, but I did not think this ad de- served to be banned from the mar- ketplace of ideas, like others might be," he said. For example, Gottesman said he would not print a Ku Klux Klan ad announcing a lynching on the Diag or a beer ad with a woman holding a beer bottle between her breasts. LSA sophomore Avram Mack said he disagreed with the revision- ist ad, but that he also saw a distinc- tion between the Daily ad and a beer ad. "A beer commercial is an ad for money. This is an expression of ideas," Mack said. But Yiddish Prof. Anita Norwich said the ad was not pro- tected by the principles of the First Amendment. "This is not responsible journal- ism," Norwich said. "This is not free speech. This is hate speech." " Presentations from both Reverend Al Sharpton and Moses Stewart, the father of Yusuf lawkins. " The honorable Bernard A. Friedman, US District Judge, will. moderate the speakers. The above to be followed by questions and comments from the audience. *It is NOT a protest. It Is NOT a march. it is NOT a rally... Rather it is an evening of discussion, a time to hear and be heard. Don't sit home and wait for the news to happeni You too can be a part of it by joining in the forum. This promises to be one of the most significant happenings on campus we will all be there watching as some of the most important issues of America are hashed out. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. On-campus subsciption rate forfall/Winter9l -92 is $30; all other subscriptions via first class U.S. mail are $149 - prorated at Nov. 1, 1991, to $105. Fall subscription only via first class mail is $75- prorated at Nov. 1 to $46. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379. Sports 747-3336, Circulation 764-0558, Classified aovertising 764-0557, Display advertising 764-0554, Billing 764-0550. 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Croll, Jennifer Dunetz, Kristofer Gette, Michelle Guy, Doug Kanter, Heather Lowman, i *At *Uaw PornrV~n Iioamw(eg eAnv t fe~mhr ) 7 70 1 7! 04 il n m I