Page 6-The Michigan Daily- Friday, October 30, 1992 I ROTC hopes to scare up money with haunted house by Tim Greimel Daily Staff Reporter ROTC members are hoping students will think a former morgue, located in North Hall's basement, is the perfect place to hang out this Halloween weekend. ROTC will host its annual haunted house this Friday and Saturday night. "It is a great way to have fun for both us and our guests," said LSA senior Anthony Gorw, who is in charge of the actors for the event and is a member of the U-M ROTC Navy branch. Engineering senior Sandra Roth, in the ROTC Air Force program and in charge of publicity for the haunted house, said the money will be donated to Safe House and the Washtenaw County Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. She predicted this year's attendance will surpass last year's unusually low 1,700 people, which she at- tributed to poor weather. Fifth-year LSA senior Ida Thong, who attended Genocide ignored, professors say The halls of North Hall, the ROTC building, were empty yesterday, but it will be filled with scary sights for the annual haunted house. The haunted house will take place in the basement of the building, next to the old morgue. the haunted house two years ago said, "The lines are always really long, but it was pretty scary in some parts." She added, "But other parts were either funny or dumb." "I encourage people to come early to avoid the lines," said Rich Duffy, fifth-year engineering senior and organizer of the event:-"Besides a better turnout and a couple new surprises at the end, this year should be comparable to past years." by Will McCahill Daily Staff Reporter Three U-M professors criticized the denial of what they called the Armenian genocide of 1915 through 1923 in a lecture yesterday afternoon in the Lane Hall Commons. More than 70 people gathered to hear the discussion of what the speakers called a "genocide" in which an estimated 600,000 to 1.5 million Armenians perished. History Prof. Todd Endelman ad- dressed revisionists - people who try to re-interpret history. Endelman said that with respect to the Jewish Holocaust, revisionists "simply say the events didn't happen ... (that) the Nazis didn't murder 6 million Jews." But Endelman said "the facticity is not up for debate" for neither the Holocaust nor the Armenian genocide. History Prof. Ronald Suny out- lined the history of the Armenian people. Although the Armenians were subjects of the Ottoman Empire and "a conquered people in their own homeland," they main- tained a religious and cultural sys- tem of their own. He said the Christian Armenians became more cosmopolitan in ,the late 19th and early 20th centuries, provoking jealousy from the pre- dominately Muslim Turks. The advent of the Young Turk regime in 1908 led to efforts to completely alter the ethnic balance with what the Turks termed "the fi- nal solution to the Armenian prob- lem," Suny said. "The disaster goes on as long as people continue to deny it," Suny added, referring to attempts since the massacre by Turkish regimes to deny its occurrence. Slavic Department Professor Kevork Bardakjian spoke as well, and told of efforts to deny the facts of the Armenian genocide. He said the Turkish government has tried to deny the fact that a mas- sacre ever occurred and has at- tempted to shut down efforts - par- ticularly in the United States - to bring the massacre back to public at- tention. "Turkish propaganda depicts Armenians as a threat to the Turkish state ... and that they deserved to die," Bardakjian said. He added that Turkey has urged Armenia to drop the issue of the genocide as a prerequisite to the es- tablishment of good relations be- tween the two countries, but Armenia has declined to do so. In a question-and-answer period after the lecture, Bardakjian criti- cized the U.S. government for "sacrificing the truth for political ends" by not pressing Turkey to ad- mit the existence of the Armenian genocide. 0 t STUDENTS Continued from page 1 LSA senior John Petz, College Republicans president, also dedi- cates long hours to campaigning for five different candidates. "This year so far has been insane. I really lack sleep. I go to class from around 9 to 2, campaign from 2 to 10 p.m. and then do homework from 10 to 4 a.m.," he said. "I have managed to only miss only two classes be- cause of rallies I had to attend, and I'm taking 17 credits," Petz said. "I sometimes get only an hour sleep but it is all worth it at the end," he added. Although many students are hired by campaign staffs, an even larger number of students volunteer for campaigns. "I would say that 50 percent of the volunteers who work at ... Ford's office are students from the U-M," Sank said. LSA senior Amy Blumenthal said she devotes at least 10 hours per week campaigning for Democratic state representative candidate Lynn Rivers. "It is important that students get involved with their community," Blumenthal said. "I felt that I could make students aware of the issues that will be affecting our generation by participating in the campaign. "I was especially impressed with (Rivers) because she gives students good perspectives on women's is- sues. I support the fact that more women are stepping into the public life as opposed to the private life," she added. Blumenthal said it is difficult to balance her school work and cam- paigning, especially during midterms. But, she said she has learned time management skills. "I know what to focus on and I seriously seem to get more work done now because I know ahead of time that I have little time to do it in," Blumenthal said. Mike Christie, a first-year Residential College student, spends at least 20 to 25 hours campaigning during the week and six hours volun- teering on the weekends for Republican U.S. House candidate Bob Geake. "I must balance my time between my girlfriend, homework and friends," Christie said. "Since I am in the Residential College, I don't get grades, just evaluations. "Sometimes I do feel pinched - especially these past couple of weeks -- but I have learned to deal with it. I always work it out, even if it means pulling all-nighters," he said. "Twenty-four hours is simply not enough time to run a campaign." LSA sophomore Rachel Rouse not only volunteers for Geake, U-M Board of Regents candidate Nancy Laro, and U.S. House candidate Dick Chrysler, but also works 10 hours a week for the U-M Office of Development and is president of the South Quad Council. "It is important to reach the peo- ple, "make issues known to students, and make politics an issue of every- one. I am the kind of person that can handle school and at the same time participate in the campaigns," Rouse said. LSA senior Deborah Schneider, a volunteer for 52nd District State Rep. Candidate Mary Schroer, said campaigning has been a great learn- ing experience. "It is important for students to get in there and make a difference. It is our generation that is at stake. The only regret I have is that I have any classes at all," she said. Professors praised students for their participation in campaigning, but expressed displeasure at students who skipped classes in order to do this work. "I understand that students want to get involved in the campaigns but campaigning is like any other extra curriculum activity. Students must keep up with the work," said Stephen Ernst, professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology. "They are here to get an educa- tion. Even though some extra curric- ular activities are more tied with ed- ucation, I would not alter a grade just because they said they were to involved in the campaign," he added. However, some students working on the campaigns said their profes- sors have been very supportive when they explain their situation. "Most of my professors are sur- prised and impressed when I tell them that I work on the Bill Ford campaign," Sank said. History Prof. Victor Lieberman said, "I encourage students to be- come involved in the campaigns and. I feel that if they fail to make my lecture that it is there business." "The campaign mangers are also very supportive when I tell them that I have a class. They just tell me to go and they don't seem to mind," Sank said. LSA junior Matt Levine, a volun- teer for Rep. Bill Ford's campaign said, "Working on the campaign has been the ultimate learning experi- ence, and I'm sure not many stu- dents can say that they had an oppor- tunity to shake Texas Governor Ann Richard's hand." Serbs force Muslims, from Bosnian cityof Jajce SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovi- na (AP) - Serb attackers reportedly captured a town held by Bosnia's Muslim-led government yesterday and thousands of Muslims were believed fleeing the area. Earlier, Bosnian officials said government forces were engaging Serbs in house-to-house fighting in Jajce, 60 miles northwest of Sarajevo, but had been confident they would be able to hold part of the city. But Muhamed Sacirbey, Bosnia- Herzegovina's U.N. ambassador, said in New York that Jajce fell after several days of bitter fighting be- tween government troops and Serb forces. "Thousands of people are now on the road withdrawing, they're being shelled and strafed as they with- draw," he said. All of the more than 30,000 Muslim residents were evac- uating, he said. Sacirbey's report, which he said was based on his official contacts in Sarajevo, could not immediately be confinned. Night of the Living Dea 7:00 pm the George Romero classic Lair of the White Worm 9:00 pm more phallic symbols for your entertainment dollar $3 fto OCi MLB 3 single / $5 double 1. .1 HIHIGT ROI H 9-U I OCRLN Now save up to 5400 on everything from the converter back Sun. Nov.1 Thu. 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