The Michigan Daily- Thursday, March 12, 1992 - Page 3 Non-profit groups receive limited funds " from meal sacrifices ! Survivor speaks on concentration camp traumas by Sarah McCarthy Members of non-profit organiza- tions say the residence hall meal sacrifice program, which allows stu- dents to donate skipped meals to charitable organizations, serves as a valuable source of income for their groups. However, students who had par- ticipated in a meal sacrifice in the past were surprised to learn of the gap between the amount they were being charged and the sum that actu- ally benefited the organization. According to the 1991-92 stan- dard meal plan, students in tradi- tional residence halls are charged $5.22 for dinner; from that fixed rate, however, only the budgeted raw food cost is contributed to the orga- nization - $1.66 per meal. The remaining $3.56 compen- sates both union payroll and main- taining the safety and sanitation standard. "They made it seem to me like all of the money was going to benefit the handicapped," first-year engi- neering student Monish Kundra said. "I figured 'all of the money' meant the $6 I'm charged for every meal." Despite the meal sacrifice's suc- cess for organizations like Volunteers for Hillel and People Understanding the Severely Handicapped, organizers said they did not realize only a portion of the amount charged would be donated. "To me it sounded like an awful lot to go for whatever it goes for," said LSA sophomore Jenny Beck, one of the organizers for Volunteers for Hillel. "But I didn't want to jump the gun and start questioning one of the best fundraisers we have." David Wahr, administrative assis- tant for Residence Operations and Student Residences, said the Dining Services department operates under a fixed cost. The only way to deduct from the fixed rate without jeopar- dizing the overall budget for ex- penditures was to focus on and iso- late the raw food cost. "Even with the sacrifice we have to pay additional costs," Wahr explained. "The program goes back several years," Residence Operations Business Manager Larry Durst said. "It's concept is to ask students to contribute something they can afford to give up. We don't want a good program to penalize the employees." When the meal sacrifice program was organized by students in the late 1960s, they originally decided to do- nate only the cost of the raw food value to charity to avoid penalizing labor in any way. Although only raw food costs are donated to the meal sacrifice pro- gram, students who elect to use their meal credit at dormitory snack bars receive more than that amount at Residence Hall snack bars. Although Durst justified the dif- ference in cost by attributing it to la- bor, it still costs Dining Services more when students participate in a meal sacrifice than if they used meal credit at a snack bar. Dining Services also said there is usually a 20 to 33 percent absentee rate for each meal, not permitting the department a great deal of flexibility in adjusting payroll for the meal sacrifice program. "Students on any 13 meal plan miss about 20 percent of all meals," Durst said, pointing out that students don't pay for that percentage. "If, somehow, (the percentage) could be spread evenly, and usually it isn't, students could sign up and not give anything up. "They charge so much for meals, you can't even relate it to money," engineering first-year student Amy Simpson said. "For the number of Despite skepticism about the din- ing hall policy, students said they would still participate in program. "I'd still do it, but I would be very irate," first-year LSA student Chris McCleary said. "The whole money and credit thing is a sham so they can avoid telling you where your money is really going. The meal plan is inherently flawed." by Karen Talaski Daily Staff Reporter Last night, University students heard the story about the horrors of the Holocaust - first hand. Robert Clary, a survivor of German Concentration Camp num- ber A5714, spoke before a full house at Hillel as part of the 13th Annual Conference on the Holocaust. Clary - one of the leading actors on the television show "Days of Our Lives" and "Hogan's Heroes" - de- scribed his experiences and his feel- ings about Holocaust Revisionism. "I spent 31 months in hell. Every time I speak about it I relive those months and I hate it," Clary said. "I barely escaped what hatred does." Born in Paris, Clary was 16 when he was taken prisoner by German soldiers and sent to Auschwitz- Buchenwald. Clary, the youngest of 14 children, was the only one in his immediate family to survive. "I didn't speak about my experi- ences for 36 years until I saw a doc- umentary where a woman talked about the camps and described the smell of the burning bodies. I could still see and smell those things," Clary said. "(The Holocaust survivor) said that she decided to tell her story so that people would not forget. I de- cided then that I too had a duty. I had to leave a legacy," Clary added. "And it's not for my sake. It is for history's sake. The world demands that I tell the truth about the Holocaust." Clary said he travels the UnitedR States and Canada telling his story. He has been talking since 1980 to schools and other groups. "As survivors, we tell them the truth. We don't lie. We don't exag gerate," Clary said. "The Nazi tried to get rid of 'Jewish vermin' and they almost did it! Six million peo- ple were killed." Clary also addressed Holocaust, Revisionism - a theory contending that the numbers of casualties and stories about the Holocaust were fal- sified and debatable. "What's'to debate? I spent 31 months in a concentration camp so, you could debate? My mother and, father were baked in an oven so you could debate?" Clary said. "Show the number on my arm to Bradley Smith (a believer in Revisionism). I did not go to a tattoo shop to get this. I don't want it on my arm," Clary said. Looking glass The south wall of the Law Quad Reading Room looms high above criss- crossing shadows on the sloping wall of the Law Library. MSA criticizes 'U' as a 'corporation' by Jennifer Silverberg Daily MSA Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly condemned University President James Duderstadt's "Corporate Model" of the University Tuesday night, by a vote of 24-3. "The resolution says something the administration should take a look at. It says that undergraduate educa- tion should be the first concern of the administration," LSA Rep. Steve Stark said of the resolution intro- duced by Rackham Rep. Amy Polk. The resolution calls on MSA to establish links with the Faculty Senate Assembly to analyze the University budget and suggest re- forms in the budget priorities that would benefit student interests. The resolution also asks the Academic Affairs Commission to conduct further research on the cor- porate model's effects on students. The assembly passed the resolu- tion after an amendment was made to the document eliminating factual information pertaining to the University's drop in national rank, increased cost of tuition and in- creased resources funded for re- search as opposed to graduate and undergraduate studies. "What was cut was the rationale for the resolution - undergraduates are suffering because of the admin- istration's conception of the University as a corporation," said LSA Rep. Todd Ochoa, who voted for the resolution. Rackham Rep. Leilani Nishime placed another resolution on Tuesday night's agenda asking the assembly to support Students of Color of Rackham-Graduate Employee's Organization (SCOR- GEO) proposal regarding teaching assistants (TAs) of color. The resolution asks MSA to en- dorse a proposal to increase the number of students of color in TA positions and call on the University administration and administrators of the University's 17 schools and col- leges to engage in negotiations with the organizations. "Basically we are asking to be allowed to compete equally for TA positions," Nishime said. "It's a very touchy situation and I know the de- partments are strapped for money, so we are open to negotiations." The resolution says that the only 70 of the 1,560 TAs from the fall 1991 term were U.S. citizens of color. "I believe it's important to have more TAs of color, both as role models and mentors, to be a visible presence and to improve our stand- ing on the job market," Nishime said. A third resolution on next week's agenda asks MSA to call on the University to provide for aniallow the distribution of free political liter- ature, including MIM Notes - the Maoist Internationalist Movement. LSA senior Philip Cohen said he.; is introducing this resolution because he has been denied the right to place MIM Notes in the lobby of the Graduate Library. Workers at the Undergraduate Library, however, al- lowed the newspaper to be placed in its lobby. "At first glance it doesn't seem like a crucial issue, but it will have long-term importance," Cohen told the assembly. "We're in some dan- ger where the administration looksat: the University more as a private than public institution." U.S., Russia want to cut world's nuclear weapons BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - The United States and Russia said yesterday they want to reduce sharply their stockpiles of the world's most dangerous nuclear weapons, but differed on the pace of those cuts. A 4 1/2-hour meeting between Secretary of State James Baker and Russian Foreign Minister Andrei K l d d anarantl n a n nnA Baker said there would have to be further meetings with Kozyrev on both the timing and the mix of a new accord. He said, "There was a genuine desire to move beyond the require- ments of the START treaty," the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty signed by Bush and former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev last July. RSG gives $1,050 in grants to four groups i , . i ' ozyrev apparenuy auvanceu prospects for a successful summit in Kozyrev said at a joint news con- Washington in mid-June. Left unre- ference at the Russian Embassy: solved was Moscow's demand for a "We worked as friends and allies compressed schedule that could cut standing on one side of the barricade or even ban ocean-spanning multi- of all the problems that beset us on ple-warhead missiles by the end of the other." the century. For years at the flashpoint of They left open the question of conflict, the United States and what whether a new arms-reduction pact used to be the Soviet Union have will be ready for signing when amassed enough nuclear weapons to President Bush meets Russian destroy each other several times President Boris Yeltsin in June. over. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today by Karen Pier Daily Graduate Schools Reporter The Rackham Student Government (RSG) allocated $1,050 in grants last night to organizations bringing speakers and conferences to campus, and to print a campus journal. In addition, RSG also discussed upcoming spring elections for March 30 and 31. Several slots are available, in- cluding the vice presidential and presidential positions and four physcical sciences and engineering slots, one in health and biological sciences, two arts and humanities slots and two social science slots. In allocating the grants, RSG gave away $150 to the Asian American Women's Journal, $300 to the United Nations Conference, $400 to the International Observer and $200 to the Arab American Student Association. Members reduced the amount of money given to one organization and denied two other requests. The Arab American Student Association re- ceived $200 instead of its requested $500 to bring a speaker comparing Zionism and apartheid. Although some members ques- tioned the need for the speaker spon- sored by the Arab American Student Association because he had previ- ously spoken to a University audi- ence, Rackham student Corey Dolgon said, "It would make sense as a group that's just starting to bring in someone guaranteed to bring in a large audience." RSG unanimously voted to award $150 to the Asian American Women's Journal - its second grant; from RSG. RSG also allocated $400 to thy International Observer to bring io two journalists to speak at thy University about their experiences; with the violation of human rights in East Timor. -46 HI Fl STUDIO VCR Service * Stereo Service Speaker repairs and components * Phono service and Needles, Cartridges Pickup & Delivery Available 215 S. Ashley 1/2 bl. north of Liberty 769-0342 Downtown Need CASH for COLLEGE? We can help! Our computerized research and matching service can help find the unpublished, private funds available for you. Call for free information. (313) 677-1714 Or write to: Scholarships Unlimited P.O. Box 15282 Ann Arbor, MI 48106 I r -a- ATTENTION ALL UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 4. 4. 4. Meetings ACT-UP Ann Arbor, meeting, 2203 Michigan Union, 7:30 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; 3rd floor Michigan League 5:15. Pro-choice Action, weekly mtg, Fishbowl, 7:30 p.m. Pre -Med Club Meeting, Pendleton rm, 6:30 p.m. Homeless Project Meeting, Trained Volunteer Corps, Dominick's .5:00 p.m. The University of Michigan Bill Clinton for President, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 7 p.m. media Furthermore Safewalk, night-time safety walking service. Sun-Thurs 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Fri-Sat, 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 102 UGLi or call 936-1000. Also, extended hours: Sun-Thurs 1-3 a.m. Stop by Angell Hall Computing Center or call 763-4246. Northwalk, North Campus nighttime team walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763-WALK. Pre-Season Discount for Limited Time on Season Golf Passes, Ann Arbor Parks and Recreation, 12-5 p.m. Leslie Park Golf Course ECB Peer Writing Tutors, Angell/Mason Hall Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. Stress and Time Management, Consultations with peer counselors available, 3100 Michigan Union, 1-3 p.m. Undergraduate Psychology Department, Undergraduate STAFF AND STUDENTS! $20 i Saturday, March 14th 10am -3pm $QsOkets 7. C, CG The M Go Blue Shop is having an Inventory Sale with all Merchandise at e'a eft $l? ants