The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 23, 1995 -3 . Flint GM DRAGON DOWN MAIN STREET workers " Medstart brings together students, child advocates to end 4- 0day strike FLINT (AP) - Workers at a cru- cial General Motors parts complex voted yesterday on a deal that would end a 4-day-old strike with a GM agreement to hire 663 employees by mid-1996, according to a union de- scription of the terms. "They were trying to take a lot of your jobs to Mexico ... and we stopped them," United Auto Workers union negotiator Scott Campbell told cheering workers as the ratification meeting began. The vote was expected to be counted by late afternoon, and the mood of the 3,000 people at the meet- ing suggested they would endorse the deal. GM comment on the agreement was not immediately available, but the union said it included a company commitment to spend more than $72 million on new product programs at the AC Delco Flint East complex through 1998. "That's going to secure jobs out into the future," said Don Beauchamp, shop committee chairman of UAW Local 651. The local's 6,800 members went on strike Wednesday at the complex, two factories that make a variety of parts used in many GM cars and trucks. As the flow of parts stopped, the company was forced to close all or parts of about 10 assembly plants in the United States and Canada, idling more than 30,000 other workers. " Kobe elif returmng to normal Los Angeles Times KOBE, Japan - January 23 (Monday) - With electricity avail- able almost everywhere and water at last reaching half the homes, this earthquake-devastated city took a first step toward normality today as crowds of commuters headed to work and children returned to school. "People bringing food from Osaka are coming in by train, buses are running to Nishinomiya (a nearby city where direct trains to Osaka are functioning), and boats are available to Osaka. So I felt I had to go to work," Masami Hamaguchi, 49, an auto company executive, said on the platform of a Kobe railway station. "They didn't ask me. But today's Monday, so anyway I should show up. Weekend rains passed without triggering serious landslides, but skies were still gray. As crews continued to dig bodies out of the rubble and clear away debris blocking streets, the at- tention of many survivors began to turn from the shock of last week's tragedy to the arduous task of re- building. Classes even resumed in about half the city, although in the worst- hit districts plans were to immedi- ately dismiss them after noting who came. "Yesterday was the first time I had contact from my company," Yotaro Konishi, 56, said after leaving the disaster relief center at the Ninomiya Elementary School near downtown Kobe. "Today we're all gathering at 10 a.m. at the office. They want to check who is OK." Ann Arbor residents parade down Main Street on Saturday in celebration of the Chinese New Year. Health care istitute director deries medical insurane By JORDAN LOWY For the Daily Dr. Patch Adams, director of the Gesundheit Institute, believes health care insurance and malpractice insur- ance are to blame for skyrocketing health care costs. His solution: free health care. Adams spoke for an hour Satur- day to an receptive 40-member audi- ence at the Quaker Friends Meeting House on Hill Street. He talked about the institute he founded 25 years ago, which offers free health care to pa- tients. The institute, located in Virginia, seeks to humanize health care and build community by offering free health care. "By creating a sense of commu- nity, healing is a natural outgrowth," Adams said. Adams said he set up the institute along with 20 other doctors because of his dissatisfaction with the health care system. "By taking the most ex- pensive thing in America and giving it away for free, we are a pie in the face of greed." ' ... we are a pie in the face of greed.' - Dr. Patch Adams founder of the Gesundheit Institute Adams boasted that he has never seen an insurance form or paid for malpractice insurance. Over the last 15 years, he has written more than 1,400 letters to foundations for money with refusals from every single one, he said. All doctors who have worked at the institute have volunteered their time. The institute has an open-house policy, never turning away anyone who comes seeking healing. In the first 12 years of the project, the insti- tute treated more than 15,000 pa- tients - 3,000 being mental health patients. Adams criticized the current medi- cal establishment, saying the medical community's dismal philosophies of maintaining professionality and dis- tance have created a tension between doctors and patients. Adams has often practiced his medicine in a clown outfit because he believes humor is one of the best ways of fighting illness and to im- prove patient-doctor relations. The institute plans to build facili- ties that will integrate arts and crafts, social service, agro-environmental- ism, nutritional education and enter- tainment along with traditional medi- cine and surgery. "Art is medicine," Adams said, and he hopes to see a full-size stage running constant performances, along with art and music facilities. A recently published book, "Ge- sundheit!" written by Adams, details the history and philosophies of the institute. Universal Studios has bought the rights to turn the story into a movie and has already spent $1 million to develop it. The event was sponsored by St. Joe's Health Educational Services. By MICHELLE LEE THOMPSON Daily Staff Reporter Working to increase awareness of children's health care and promote children's rights, Detroit Mayor Den- nis Archer joined forces with a coali- tion of leading child advocates and University students during Saturday's Medstart conference. The third annual conference, titled "Opening Our Eyes Through the Voice of Children," was held in the Medical School's Towsley Center. About 400 students, faculty and speak- ers attended the conference which focused on children's rights. Archer, the keynote speaker, spoke about community empowerment and the need to educate children. "Education is so important and vital because if you get a good educa- tion, chances are you'll get a good job. And chances are if you get a good job you won't wind up a statistic in prison." Archer said. "When will we learn? Perhaps after the next elec- tion." Archer spoke of his youth and the trail he blazed from poverty to be- coming one of the nation's most pow- erful lawyers as recognized by the National Law Journal. Audience members said they were inspired by Archer's plans for Detroit and its chil- dren. "Their future has been entrusted to us. I'm determined not to fail them," Archer said. "It really does take a whole village to raise a child." Detroit's mayor also spoke about his plans for the $2 billion in commit- ments the city has received for its recently approved empowerment zone. Archer said he will raise tradi- tionally accepted standards of educa- tion and child wellness. "(Archer's) goals were so in tune with what we want to do," said Medstart co-chair and second-year Medical student Julie Carroll. "You just realized that there are people out there like hiin, and that's great." The Medstart coalition includes Uni- versity students in Engineering, Public Health, Nursing, Business and Law. "What (Archer) had to say was not only pertinent to Detroit and the De- troit area, it was pertinent to us," said Medstart coalition co-chair and sec- ond-year Medical student Vivek Rajagopal. "This year we tried to em- phasize community involvement and I think we can definitely take that further." First-year Public Health student Rachel Kogan said she was impressed with Archer. "He seems like such a capable and progressive leader." Author-physician Dr. Perri Klass opened the conference with a dia- logue on the importance of children's education, including tales from her clinical work. Klass initiated the Reach Out and Read program that distributes books to children who visit her clinic. She argued that medical professionals hold opposing views on many issues, but that they agree on the importance of reading to children. "The only thing that everybody agrees on is that being read to as 'a child is very important," Klass said. Dr. Patch Adams, founder of the Gesundheit Institute in West Virginia, spoke on "Joy: The Ultimate Cure." The institute was founded on Adams' motto: "That love and humor can truly conquer all." Other speakers included guest fac- ulty member Jean Kilbourne and Dr. Benjamin Carson, director of pediatric surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, who spoke about "S u cce ed in g Against the Odds." Kilbourne de- livered an address '~ "'titled "Killing Us Softly" in which Archer the educator ati former adviser fo the surgeon general discussed the media's impact on body image and addiction. She connected the objectifi- cation with women in advertising with violence, child abuse and rape. Although it used to be socially forbidden for women to express their, sexual appetites, Kilbourne said, now it is forbidden for women to express their appetites for food. "The menage-a-trois that we're all supposed to be afraid of is now with Ben and Jerry," Kilbourne said, alluding to the Vermont ice cream makers. Kilbourne presented a series of statistics on violent crimes and said, "You would have to conclude that: we're a nation that hates our children. "Our children are not brought up by parents," Kilbourne asserted, "They are brought up by the mass media." The Partnership for a Drug-Fre America never advertises against al- cohol and tobacco, Kilbourne said, despite that the two drugs claim: 100,000 and 400,000 lives a year, com-. pared to the 30,000 lives claimed by heroin, crack, cocaine and other drugs.: Kilbourne listed major contribu-: tors to the partnership -the makers: of Miller and Budweiser beers and Lucky Strike, Marlboro and Camel: cigarettes, who advertise in those' same media through cartoons. "I don't care what the industry says - those ads are focused at teen- agers if not younger (people)," said second-year Medical student Lisa Seyfried. "They don't want a drug-free America. They want an America on their drugs," Kilbourne said. How-: ever, due to the reliance on such ad- vertisers, no media can express the' true dangers of the products which advertise in their publications and TV shows, she asserted. Kilbourne has rallied against this "censorship" in op-ed in The New. York Times and in appearences on shows including NBC's "Today Show" and ABC's "20/20". "That's real freedom and it's worth fighting for," Kilbourne said. Apple to recall A2, 'Roommates' By RACHEL LAWSON For the Daily When University graduate student Max Apple invited a woman that he met at an anti-war rally in the Michi- gan Union to spend the night at his house, he did not count on such strong objections from his roommate. Refusing to allow the woman to stay in their house, Max's roommate Rocky forced her to leave in the middle of the night. The next morning 93- year-old Rocky told Max, "You're lucky that I woke up or she'd be here right now with a policeman. ... You bring a girl to your house ... and then you don't marry her - they'll put you in jail for breach of promise." The need to enlighten his immi- grant grandfather Rocky about dating practices in the late 1960s was one of the simpler challenges Max Apple wrote about in his autobiographical novel, "Roommates: My Grandfather's Story." "Max Apple is arguably one of the best short story writers we have in this country and one of the few who can be serious and funny at the same time. While only some of his stories touch on Jewish subjects, all of them reflect a Jewish appreciation for the rich com- plexity of relationships and the deli- cious ambiguity of life," said Hillel Director Michael Brooks. The book refers specifically to Ann Arbor, detailing the wooden booths at Drake's, baseball games in Burns Park and Frisbee players in the Diag. "It's very much a Michigan book in every way, the writer,, the publisher, the - setting," Apple ' said in a telephone interview Friday. " % Originally, Apple wrote "Roommates" as a Apple screenplay and sold it to Disney which will release the motion picture of the same name March 10 - staring Peter Falk as Rocky. "Peter Falk is terrific. Although he doesn't look anything like Rocky, there were moments he had him ex- actly," Apple said. Apple added that there are many differences between the film and the book including the family's religion. In the movie, Rocky, though still an immigrant, is portrayed as a Polish Catholic instead of a Lithuanian Jew. The film's producers felt that this change would give a more universal appeal to "Roommates," he said. When Apple first thought about writing his story, he did not think it would be received well. "I thought my story was too small, too private. I was completely wrong." Seven months after the books re- lease, Apple said he is still receiving letters from people who tell him how moving his characters are. Bette Cotzin, an Ann Arbor resi- dent who plans to attend Apple's reading tonight, said, "Having read the book 'Roommates,' I am really looking forward to hearing Apple speak. He has a fascinating perspec- tive on issues of aging, life and death, inter-generation relationships and disability from which we can all learn a great deal." Hillel's Celebration of Jewish Arts will bring Apple to speak and read from his works tonight. In the past this organization has brought Dennis Miller, Adam Sandler and Chaim Potok to campus. Apple is currently a professor of English and Creative Writing at Rice University and recipient of a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. Max Apple will speak tonight at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel, 1429 Hill Street Tickets: $7 ($5 students). U *1 Don't Panic!! If you think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. Group Meetings U Circle K International, 663- 2461, Michigan Union, Parker Room, 7:30 p.m. U Dyke Discussion Group, 840- 2512, Henderson House, 10 p.m. U Ninjitsu Club, beginners wel- 747-6889, CCRB, Room 2275, 8:30-10 p.m. Events U "Careers in Consulting," spon- sored by Career Planning and Placement, Michigan Union, ry Pendleton Room, 6-7:30 p.m. Student Services Q 76-GUIDE,peercounselingphone line, 764-8433,7 p.m.-8 a.m. U ECB Peer Tutorial, Angell Hall Computing Site, 747-4526, 7-11 p.m. U Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; THE 1995 HOPWOOD THE 1995 HOPWOOD UNDERCLASSMEN AWARDS AND WINNERS OF: Academy of American Poets Bain-Swiggett Poetry prize Roy W. Cowden Fellowship Louise and George Piranian Scholarshiv 1 s