itW ig n One hundred three years of editorial freedom Untti Vol. IV, Na 94 Arm Arhorr Michigan - Monday, March 14, C) 1994 The Michigan Daily NewApple computer *debuts this morning By SCOT WOODS DAILY STAFF REPORTER The much-awaited Power PC mi- croprocessor will make its campus debut this morning. * Apple will present the long- awaited next generation of personal computers at a 10 a.m. unveiling at the Campus Computer Showcase on the ground floor of the Union. The unveiling will be via satellite from Apple's California headquarters. Known as the Power Macintosh line of computers, the new machines can run Macintosh, Windows and *DOS applications at the same time. Apple claims the new processor can run Windows and DOS programs at a speed comparable to an Intel 486 chip. Jonathan Freeman, one of three Apple student representatives on cam- pus, said, "It's going to be an amazing show." Food will be served while visitors examine three models featur- ing the Power PC processor. The new computers fall into the *medium-high price range, beginning at about $1,600 for the Power Macintosh 8100. One strong selling point of the Power Macintosh computers is that the basic operating system is System 7.2, providing a familiar environment for old Macintosh users. The Power PC screen looks like any Macintosh. When Windows or DOS is in use, a new window opens on the System 7.2 desktop. Apple claims its new computers outperform Macintosh computers emulating an IBM-compatible be- cause the Power PC chip is based on Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC) technology. "The technology is simple, and yet amazing at the same time," Free- man said. "IBM developed this tech- nology in the '70s and put it on the shelf." RISC chips process information in smaller chunks than Complex In- struction Set Computing (CISC) chips, which include virtually all chips used in current personal computers. The Power PC microprocessor is the result of a three-year collabora- tion between Apple, IBM and Motorola. In a demonstration for the Daily, a Power Macintosh 8100 ran four QuickTime movies concurrently, and See POWER PC, Page 2 si s mmmds for jobs in Detroit Clinton says job training key to future By JAMES R. CHO and DAVID SHEPARDSON DAILY STAFF REPORTERS DETROIT - Amid cheering crowds, President Clinton arrived here yesterday afternoon, alongside his top economic advisers, in preparation for today's job summit. Clinton came calling to promote his plan to streamline job re-training programs and to steer attention away from ongoing questions regarding the Whitewater affair. Clinton visited Focus:HOPE, a job re-training center in a rundown part of the city's west side. Wiping away tears at times, Clinton said he was proud to come to what he called "one of the most advanced" job-retraining centers in the country. "Here we are, in an inner-city neighborhood, with building after building of plants that were closed down, which could have become a symbol for the loss of hope, which could have become yet another ex- cuse for why people can't make it if they are poor, or if they are minori- ties, or if they are women, or if they've been on welfare," Clinton said. "This is a place that says when you work, when you learn, you can do, you can have a future." Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) praised Clinton for supporting the job-train- ing program. "Clinton is the first president to explicitly support Focus:HOPE in the budget," Levin said. Father William T. Cunningham, the executive director of Focus:HOPE, added, "This is the miracle on Oak- land Boulevard. It is only appropriate for me to introduce the man from Hope, Ark., to Focus:HOPE." Clinton himself touched on this theme. "I remember I used to say, when I was running for president, that I still believed in a place called Hope. And now I can say that I still believe in a place called Focus:HOPE." Many of the politicians present at the tour of the Focus:HOPE center hoped to capitalize on the-added attention of the center and the city of Detroit. See SUMMIT, Page 9 President Clinton speaks to a crowd of Focus:HOPE participants yesterday afternoon. Skills not diplomas may be ticket to jobs for By DAVID SHEPARDSON DAILY NEWS EDITOR DETROIT - Aside from a photo- op or two, the G7 conference will likely have few students in the spot- light and will be focused on reams of economic data, projections and fore- casts, out of reach and out of mind for most college students. So the question is: Why should college students care about a highly technical economic conference here? Politicians and participants great and small tried answering that ques- tion with one running theme: College students need jobs and there aren't enough of them now. President Clinton tried to combat the complexity of the economic con- ference by speaking in broad strokes about the need for re-employment. Preparing for what his aides said will be a major economic policy speech, Clinton said skills, not diplo- mas, are what counts. "Unless people are trained, unless they have a skill that enables them to compete and win in the global economy, only then will they be guar- anteed a job," Clinton said. In a brief exchange with reporters after deboarding Air Force One at Selfridge Air National Guard Base, the president said college students should be carefully eyeing the jobs summit. "The jobs summit is working to create jobs and college students need jobs after graduating," Clinton said, while shaking hands with Air Na- tional Guard members. Gov. John Engler said college stu- dents should be extremely watchful of the jobs summit. "If they have the skills and the background, it doesn't matter how many years of college they have, they will find work." Engler stressed that college stu- dents should train for careers that are in demand. "Finding a job depends on what kind of work is out there," he said. "It also has a lot to do with the Univer- sity. The University does not benefit very much if it does not help its stu- dents find work after they graduate,". Engler said. The governor contrasted the col- lege students without skills and many years of college with the Focus:HOPE candidates. "At Focus:HOPE, young people will go right to work after they gradu- ate," Engler said. "Which isn't al- ways the case with college students." State Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D- Lansing), a gubernatorial candidate with a college student of her own here at the University, said students need jobs and it is the responsibility of the government to provide them. college grads "This country and this state for too long have not done enough to employ people fully," Stabenow said. "We need good jobs for students coming out of college, not minimum wage jobs." U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D-De- troit) said he was optimistic about the job market in the years to come, but said he was unsure as to what effect the conference itself would have on students. "I don't know. Will the confer- ence create any jobs? Probably not. Will it help? It might." Father William T. Cunningham, the director of Focus:HOPE, said he was optimistic for the future of young people, not just college students. "We are taking young people that would not go to college and training them for good jobs with a 100-per- See STUDENTS, Page 9 'U' receives sculpture *memorializing Holocaust Greeks come together for week of fun, funds By PATRICIA MONTGOMERY DAILY STAFF REPORTER Transmitting power, energy and knowledge of the Holocaust, the 7-foot, patina-colored memorial monument, sitting on University grounds, speaks for itself. The sculpture, the first Holocaust memorial in an American university, depicts a person with one arm raised in the air, the other covering the head. "My words are irrelevant, but what the sculpture says is you invent something," said the sculptor, Leonard Baskin, who proudly in- spected his work yesterday as it was unveiled at the corner of Fletcher and Washington streets, s't... ...a,. ..F *I.--- -T--------- .. .. .t. A choir and soloist Marilyn Krimm per- formed several songs in Hebrew in remem- brance of those who died in the Holocaust. Modern Jewish History Chair Todd Endelman, the keynote speaker of the cer- emony, spoke about the "exploration of the meanings to make sense of the Holocaust'... particularly, looking at the larger meanings that have been attributed to it." Internal Medicine Prof. David Schteingart said, "While many atrocities have been com- mitted and are still being committed spirits are not destroyed." Schteingart suggested that "every city should By MEGAN SCHIMPF DAILY STAFF REPORTER Rising to the challenge, Greek Week 1994 seeks to raise money for philanthropies and improve the im- age of the Greek system. "The main reason we do it is to raise money for the philanthropies," said Greek Week Co-chair Erik Peterson, an LSA senior. "Our secondary focus is that it's great to see the Greek system come together- in good competition," Peterson said. "People are being en- ergetic, working together for a good c.noe Ianud having aogreat time doing "We try to choose (charities) that are pertinent to the community and to college students," Peterson said. "We try to give money to charities that will be impacted by our donation." The slogan for Greek Week 1994 is "Rise to the Challenge." "We wanted something very ac- tive to encourage people to go out and be active - rise to the challenge to participate in the events, raise money, promote the system and be excited about it while they're doing it," Peterson said. The entire campus is welcome to