The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 23, 1992 - Page 3 i Panel focuses on Blacks in mrnedia by Chastity Wilson Daily Staff Reporter Last night the Black Student Union sponsored a panel discussion and workshop titled "Redefining Black Media" in the Kuenzel room of the Michigan Union. Speakers addressed the issue of how the media, particularly televi- sion and film, portray and involve African-Americans. Harry Allen, a writer, Hip Hop activist and "Media Assassin" for the popular rap group, Public En- emy was among the speakers. Allen, who has written for popular publications like Village Voice, Spin, and Essence, said he was not sure that any such thing as "Black media" exists. When speak- ing of Black culture, he explained, we must be referring to anti-white supremacists ideas because white culture is white supremacy, other- wise why call it "white" culture, he asked. He also discussed Public En- emy's newest music video, "By the Time I Get to Arizona" in which Chuck D. and the SWI's go to Ari- zona, which doesn't officially rec- ognize Martin Luther King, Jr. hol- iday, kill politicians, and blow up the governor. The video, he explained, is nei- ther a violent tribute to King or his non-violent approach, nor a sugges- tion of how to obtain Civil Rights, but a "revenge fantasy" of tactics that remain untried. Groups seek marrow donor for young boy by Hope Calati Student and community groups will unite this weL.end in a drive designed to locate matching bone marrow for Askia Abdulmuta- kabbir, the four year old son of a University alumna with a rare blood disease. Abdulmutakabbir was diagnosed two years ago with osteopetrosis, a disease with the only known cure being a marrow transplant. University alumna Malekia Abdulmutakabbir, Askia's mother, and donor drive co-chairs, Julie Wheaton and Susie Wolter-Brown, have targeted the African-American community at the University in their search for compatible bone marrow. Wheaton emphasized the urgency of Abdulmutakabbir's situation and said, "He needs a bone marrow transplant so that he can grow up." And while the benefits to the pa- tient may be obvious, she said, the experience of saving a life may be just as valuable for the donor whose marrow matches. "The two people often feel like they'd like to meet each other, " she said. A compatible donor must have the matching human leukocyte anti- gen (HLA). Because HLA is geneti- cally determined, Askia has a better chance of finding a donor within his own racial group. However, cross- race donations are possible. "One doesn't want to stress the differences, but in this situation it is a biological reality," said Wheaton. The Black Greek Association (BGA) adopted the drive as its at the drive. The drive is being funded by the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP), a database which matches patients and potential donors. Sonya Brown, the drive's student co-coordinator, said, "We're doing it for Askia, but we're also doing it to get more African-Americans on the database." While the drive's target is to find a donor for Abdulmutakabbir, people of all races are encouraged to be tested so that the registry may be increased from its present 470,000 donors. Potential donors must be be- tween 18 and 55 and in good health. Qualified donors will have a vial of blood removed from the arn which will then be tested for a compatible HLA and registered on the database. If the marrow matches, the poten- tial donor will receive educational and medical counseling before be- coming obligated to donate. The drive will be conducted at the Michigan Union Anderson Room Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. UUUU KAN lfI I FVLQII Harry Allen, Hip-Hop activist and Media Assassin for the rap group Public Enemy, holds up the press release for the video of the song "By the time I get to Arizona." Another speaker was Robert Chrisman, a University lecturer in the Center for African Studies and the English department. Chrisman is also the editor and publisher of Black Scholar Magazine. "Mass media," he said, "is mo- nopolizing, racist in from and con- tent, a commodity of reality, pol- lution, parasitic, and an aspect of the ideology of society." "Through mass media, the stereotypes of slavery are trans- ferred," he said. This leads to the spread of the poison of racist ide- ology, he added. Media encourages isolation and alienation, he said. The last speaker was Romell Foster-Owens, an independent film maker, producer-director. A gradu- ate of the American Film Institu- tion and winner of three NAACP awards, Foster-Owens said, writ- ing and producing are ways of con- trolling. Abdulmutakabbir semester service project. In addition, members of the Angel Club, My Friends Care Leukemia Fund, the Aplastic Anemia Association of Michigan, and Red Cross will assist "As a film tell the story tell," she said. maker you have to that you want to LSA first-year student Richard Mack said after listening to each of the speakers, "We see shows like 21 Jump Street with Blacks in au- thority positions and a lot of Blacks move towards the right wing, thinking that we're doing well and no longer need to revolt. These people are settling." Duderstadt tries to light fire in public access television 'chat' 'U' hosts ethnicity symposium by Guillermo Pinczuk The revival of ethnicity and na- tionalism and its effect on various countries will be the focus of a symposium to be held today at 3 p.m. in the Rackham Ampitheater. Professor Edward McCarus, di- rector of the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies, said the symposium, entitled "Ethnicity and Resurgent Nationalism Around the World," serves several purposes. First and foremost, it is de- signed to educate the University community about how different countries are trying to overcome common problems, McCarus said. The annual symposium is also in- tended to provide a setting for fac- Correction Yesterday's story about Alex Haley inadvertently omitted a name from the byline. The story was written by both Rob Patton and Mona Qureshi. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today ulty-student interaction and to give faculty an opportunity to get ac- quainted across disciplinary lines. The symposium series has ad- dressed a common theme affecting a variety of nations since its inception in 1984. The conference was organized by the Intercenter Council (ICC), a committee comprised of the direc- tors of the Center for International Business Education (CIBE), the University Council on International Academic Affairs (UCIAA) and members from six other international centers throughout the University. This year's conference features a professor from each of the six area centers and from the Program of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. by Purvi Shah Daily Administration Reporter University President James Duderstadt is sending out a differ- ent type of smoke signal to warm up the public through a new medium: a "fireside chat." The fireside chat is a discussion of University issues between Duderstadt and four faculty mem- bers - School of Music Dean Paul Boylan, Department of Anthropology Chair Richard Ford, Center for the Education of Women Director Carol Hollenshead, and Rackham Associate Dean James Jackson. Shirley Clarkson, director of Presidential Communications, said the fireside chat - to be broadcast on public access cable television for a week starting Feb. 2. - will spot- light principal campus concerns. In the one-hour, prerecorded pro- gram, Duderstadt and the faculty members discussed developments in undergraduate education, integra- tion of professional schools into other University programs, the role of women in academia and higher education administration, and the responsibility of graduate schools in preparing minority students for future faculty positions. "The main idea was to experi- ment," Clarkson said. "It's very frustrating on all sides to have no way to let people know what issues 'We came to a greater awareness of some of these matters. - Paul Boylan, School of Music dean are being discussed by administra- tors ... This is a way to broaden out information." Although the program will reach Ann Arbor residents, Clarkson said the fireside chat is targeted for the University community. While Clarkson emphasized that the program is not a state of the University address, faculty partici- pant Boylan said the program should help spark further debate on the issues discussed. "I don't think any of us were speaking as experts, just citizens of the University," Boylan said. "I think we came to a greater aware- ness of some of these matters. We became informed." Boylan added that the group dis- cussed an "overview of the overar- ching issues which we all ought to be thinking about which might not be appropriate in our local units. However, yet to be determined is whether the fireside chat will pro- duce more smoke than fire. Clarkson said the administration would wait to assess the program before developing new broadcasts. "We honestly don't know if it's a workable means of communication or not," she said. She added that while televised communication is not a substitute for face-to-face contact, "perhaps other administrators or units might want to use television if it seems to get the message out." Health services now bills insurance companies Meetings ACT-UP Ann Arbor, meeting, Michigan Union, Crofoot Rm, 7:30 p.m. Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion and Reproductive Rights, mass mtg, Michigan Union, check at the C.I.C. desk, 6:30 p.m. Amnesty International U of M, mass mtg, Michigan Union, Pendleton Rm, 7 p.m. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 1311 EECS, weekly luncheon meeting, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, weekly group mtg, 1040 Dana Bldg, 7 p.m. Islamic Circle, weekly mtg, Michigan League, 3rd floor, 6:15. Pro-Choice Action, mass mtg, Michigan League, Rm D, 7:30 p.m. Speakers "Chaos, Fractals, and Dynamics", Robert Devaney, 1800 Chemistry, 4 p.m. "Conformational Analysis: From the Pseudorotation of Cycloheptane to the Pseudopotential for Protein Folding", Gordon Crippen 1640 Chem, 4 p.m. "From the Mountaintop - '92", William Anderson. 4th floor Rackham Aud, 8-9 a.m. "The Graduate School Experience", John Williams. 1650 Chemistry Bldg,6 p.m. "Why is there so much female- female competition in a mildly polygonous mammal like Homo Sapiens?", Steven Gaulin Rackham E. Lecture Rm, 4 p.m. "Pro-Life Feminism", Julie Wiley. Angell Hall, Aud C, 8 p.m. Furthermore Safewalk, night-time safety walking '1 .........m....rrn i. C.., i- , Northwalk, North Campus safety walking service. Temporary service Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-11:30 a.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763-WALK. Full service begins Sunday, Jan. 26. Ethnicity and Resurgent Nationalism Around the World, annual symposium, Rackham Amphitheatre, 3-5 p.m. Race, Poverty, and the Environment, symposium, Honigman Auditorium, Hutchins Hall, noon-3:15 p.m. Decentralist Approaches to Environmental Issues, panel discussion with local Greens and Libertarians, Michigan Union, 2209AB, 7:30 p.m. Commemoration of the Scud Attacks on Israel, Diag, afternoon. Comedy Company, auditions, Michigan Union, Pond Rm, 4:30-10 p.m. School of Music, Jazz combos, North Campus Commons, 8 p.m. ProfessionalDevelopment Program for International Women, International Center, Rm 9, 1-3 p.m. U of M Gospel Chorale, special concert with Marvin Winans, Rackham Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. Film series, Kristallnacht, 1500 EECS Bldg, North Campus, 5 p.m. Russkij Chaj, weekly Russian conversation practice at all levels, MLB 3rd floor conference rm, 4-5 p.m. U of M Snowboard,. weekly snowboarding, The Cube, 5 p.m. Jazz Cafe, jazz ensembles, North Campus Commons dining rm, 8 p.m. Registration for "Uncommon Campus Courses", North Campus Commons. ECB Peer Writing Tutors, Angell/Mason Hall Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. Career Planning and Placement., Summer Job Fair: Pre-Fair Workshop, by Joshua Meckler Daily Staff Reporter Students who have visited University Health Services (UHS) this year have had to fill out an ad- ditional piece of paperwork. The one-page form asks for the name of the student's insurance company and their policy number. And for certain services, if the stu- dent returns their form, and if they agree to notify the company, UHS bills the student's insurance carrier. The procedure, new this year, is part of UHS' ongoing attempt to keep health-care costs down, said Dr. Caesar Briefer, director of University Health Services. "We decided we should begin to look at our ability to seek reim- bursement for certain procedures that we do in those students that have insurance that would pay for it," he said. Even though students will now pay for health services through their fee and sometimes from insurance, Briefer said, "It's not duplication at all. It's a matter of finding sources that don't cost students any more money in order to keep the fee as low as possible." Briefer stressed that "students will not get billed under any cir- cumstances." And, he added, "Students are al- ways in control. They can, for in- stance, decline to give us the infor- mation. They are requested on each and every situation. "We automatically do not bill for any sensitive services - any- thing that has to do with personal life." For example, pregnancy tests or the cost of contraceptives would not be billed to an insurance com- pany. The procedures that may be billed include X-rays, physical ther- apy and some lab tests.. An office visit to a doctor or specialty clinic would not be billed and is covered by students' health service fees, Briefer said. All enrolled students currently pay $84.50 per semester for health care. That fee entitles them to all UHS services including tests, x- rays, office visits, specialty services and physical therapy. Although figures are not yet available, Briefer said he thinks UHS will recoup a net of about $100,000 from insurance claims this academic year. But compared to the UHS budget of $8.5 million, "it's relatively small potatoes," Briefer said. Students have been fairly recep- tive to the new program, Briefer said. "I would say most students are- willing to comply." "One problem ,is sometimes we get so busy ... and we just can't col- lect the data," Briefer said. The University of Minnesota has had a similar plan in place since 1985, said Gailon Roen, director of operations at Boynton Health Service at Minnesota. In 1984, Minnesota students asked that insurance companies be' billed so their health service fee could be held down. Off-campus Housing Day helps students combat housing rush by Nytasha Walters The off-campus housing rush for next fall has begun and students can keep pace with available housing op- tions by attending "Off-Campus Housing Day" between noon and 4 p.m. today in the Michigan Union Ballroom. "Off-Campus Housing Day has been designed as a one-stop compre- hensive housing information event," said Mark Erichson, an adviser Housing Information Office. Erichson explained that the event was planned for students who don't have a lot of time to worry about their housing situation a year from now. Students will have the opportu- nity to gather housing listings from 50 major landlords and talk with alternative housing representatives for more options. The Ann Arbor Tenants Union and Student Legal Services will be available to provide information about tenants rights and advice for signing leases. Michigan Consolidated, a local gas company, will be on hand with information to assist students with their utility bills. CONGRATULATIONS EDIT STAFF ! The edit staff of The Michigan Daily recently won 998 out of 1,000 points in the Columbia Scholastic Press Association contest. Although the newspapers were not ranked, no other college newspaper received over 998. Also, the Associated Collegiate Press , IttA"*( " lat*i"fA I