Lo~tCAI4LTA/ The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 1, 1995 -3 Parents' sexual views strongly impact children A daughter's lifestyle choice of whether to cohabit or marry is greatly influenced by the views of her mother, University of Michigan and Univer- sity of Chicago researchers said in a recent study of more than 700 young adults and their mothers. Researchers found that for those mothers who believed cohabitation to be acceptable behavior, both their sons and daughters married at a significantly *lower rate. Results also showed many young women chose not to cohabit due to parental disapproval rather than a personal objection to cohabitation. Daughters were more likely to cohabit if their mothers were divorced or pregnant before marrying, and less likely if their parents were religious or still married. *Religion lowers blood pressure Although medication and diet may control high blood pressure, research by a group of schools, including the University, has shown that attending religious services also may be benefi- cial. Previously, researchers attributed lower blood pressure among religious ,people to lower tobacco and alcohol use. However, studies comparing groups where the amount of smoking is similar indicated religion itself was a factor. Non-smokers who frequently at- tended religious services were seven times less likely to +have hyperten- sion, and their smoking peers were four times less likely to have abnor- mal blood pressures. U' students named GEM fellows The National Consortium for Gradu- ate Degrees for Minorities in Engineer- ing and Science Inc. has selected 10 University students to receive the consortium's GEM fellowships. The consortium aims to increase the number of minorities in graduate study Oprograms for science and engineering. TheGEM fellows will participate in paid internships this summer at Fortune 500 companies and government labo- ratories before beginning theirgraduate studies. Aggressive behavior in children related *to family structure In a study of 393 fourth-grade children from low- and middle-in- come families in the Baltimore area, researchers from the University and John Hopkins University drew as- sessments of behavior from each child's teacher and primary caregiver. Teachers assessed boys from single-mother families as being three Otimes as likely to be in the top third of aggressive behavior ratings as boys from families with both parents present. Aggressive girls were more than 2 1/2 times as likely to be from single-mother, families. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Matthew Smart Women's commission to kick off new programs By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter While campaign platforms and an election push begin to surround the Michigan Student Assembly, the Women's Issues Commission is kick- ing off an equally chaotic spring. More than four new programs addressing women's concerns will begin in the next few months. During the first few weeks of March, the commission, in conjunc- tion with the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center and the National Organization for Women, will organize a group of University students to travel to Wash- ington, D.C., on April 9 for the "Rally Activist remembers '47 Taiwan massacre By Spencer Dickinson Daily Staff Reporter Kristie Wang, a Taiwanese inde- pendence activist, gave the first 2- 28' Memorial Lecture yesterday to commemorate theTaiwan massacres of 1947. Wang, who is the program direc- tor for the Center for Taiwan Interna- tional Relations in Washington, D.C., focused on the 1947 uprising and the current political situation in Taiwan. She drew a parallel between the events of 1947 and the "Taiwan Ques- tion" troubling international policy- makers today. "The riots in '47 are like what is going on today," she said. "The people are demanding to be heard." Wang said the incident began with the seizure of a Taiwanese cigarette merchant's wares by Guomindang forces in the capital city of Taipei on Feb. 27, 1947. The merchant was badly beaten after she resisted. Taiwanese people came to her aid and confronted the soldiers. This snowballed into massive uprisings during which the Guomindang gov- ernment killed 20,000 Taiwanese, Wang said. This was a product of tensions caused by the Guomindang's rule of a territory that had been under Chinese and Japanese rule. Today, the Guomindang govern- ment in Taiwan is all that is left of Republican China since the party was overthrown on the mainland by the Communist Party in 1949. Communist China has blocked the Guomindang-ruled nation' s inclusion in the United Nations. Wang said a movement for a democratic Taiwan is gaining powerdespite thegovernment's tight control of the media. Membership in the United Na- tions is one goal of CTIR. "Without global recognition, Taiwanese dig- nity is still denied," Wang said. "It is time to let Taiwan be Taiwan." Wang studied public policy at Harvard and the University of Chi- cago, and worked in Taiwan as a student. "Working there really opened my eyes (to the severity of the situa- tion)," she said. Taiwanese American Students for Awareness sponsored the lecture. for Women's Lives," a statement against domestic violence. "We want to get as many women and men possible to Washington," said Alison Hanover, an LSA sophomore and Women's Issues Commission member. "The point is to get them there to get Congress and the govern- ment to realize that what's being done right now just isn't enough." LSA Rep. Elizabeth McHenry, a junior and Women's Issues Commis- sion member, agreed that the rally will increase government awareness. "It's going to be a really great experience. Personally, we just want to get busloads of people and just go down there and make people aware of what's going on," McHenry said. Before April, the commission will continue to aim toward empowering women, beginning by sponsoring a self- defense workshop this Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. in the Intramural Build- ing. Emily Beny, the chair of the com- mission, said self-defense will always remain a valuable asset for women. "Regardless of the recent rapes on campus, self-defense is a necessity. While fear may have been triggered recently, this course is always impor- tant," Berry said. Hanover agrees that a self-defense workshop will help empower women. "This has always been a problem and the idea of walking alone at night has terrorized'a lot of women. It's not really fair that half the population can't walk outside after the sun goes down," she said. Another ongoing item on the commission's agenda is the push to bring feminist speaker Betty Friedan to campus in mid-April. Friedan, 74,wrote "The Feminist Mystique," which is of- ten attributed with beginning the sec- ond wave of the women's movement in the 1960s. The commission is currently fund-raising from other women's orga- nizations to cover the $10,000 cost to bring Friedan to Ann Arbor. "I'd really love to hear her ideas on women in today's culture and so- ciety," McHenry said. "She could give some great ideas on how to gain re- spect in today's world. I think sheS very interested in coming, and it may really happen." In addition to bringing a speaker to campus. the commission is encour- aging students to voice their opinions during the Women's Coffee Hour, beginning tomorrow at 9 p.m. in the Gratzi coffee shop. The Coffee Hour will be an informal discussion group on issues that concern women. "I wanted to make it so that we can talk about anything," Berry said. "One issue we might discuss is the viola- tion of women's rights in the Jake Baker case. It's just an easy forum so women can get together and talk." Mich. would lose 3 military bases~ in Pentagon plan WASHINGTON (AP) - Three military facilities in Michigan were on the Pentagon's recommended base closing list released yesterday, but the hundreds of jobs that would be lost are mostly civilian jobs. Smaller facilities are listed for clo- sure -the Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant, the Naval Reserve Center in Cadillac and Selfridge Army Garrison in Mount Clemens. The closures would affect 62 mili- tary jobs and more than 700 civilian jobs, with the bulk of them - 555 - at the Selfridge Army Garrison. The state would have a net loss of 280 federal civilian jobs and no net loss of military jobs because two Michigan bases would get a boost in personnel. The U.S. Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command in Warren stands to gain 186 jobs, and an agency at the Battle Creek Federal Center would get 97 jobs under the proposal. Despite Michigan's losses, the state emerged relatively unscathed compared to the hard-hit states like Texas, which stood to lose about 7,000 jobs. Defense Secretary William Perry said the 146 closings and realign- ments nationally would translate into nearly $6 billion in savings by 2001. The Pentagon's list now goes to the Defense Base Closure and Re- alignment Commission, which will make a final recommendation to the President by July 1. Aside from the 555 civilian jobs at the Selfridge Army Garrison, 54 mili- tary jobs would be lost, according to the list. The garrison is located on the Selfridge Air National Guard Base, which would gain 54 military person- nel, the Pentagon said. Army spokesman Eric Emerton said only 328 people, including 16 military personnel, work for the Army at the base. The Pentagon public af- fairs office was swamped with phone calls about such discrepancies and did not return calls yesterday. However, commission spokesman John Earnhardt said such discrepan- cies would be resolved as the com- mission reviewed the list. "We'll go over each recommendation with a fine-tooth comb," he said. The garrison personnel maintain the 945 housing units for the base. The Pentagon said it could close the Selfridge Army Garrison because there was ample public housing for military personnel in the surrounding community. The Pentagon estimated it would cost $5 million to close the guard base Closures would affect 62 military and more than 700 ciilian jobs.N and would save $140 million over 20 years. The Selfridge Air National Guard Base currently has 500-600 military personnel and 1,800-1,900 civili% employees. The joint-use installatio( serves the Air Force, Air Force Re- serve, Coast Guard and Marines and is home to ,the 127th fighter wing, which flies F-16s and the 191st air lift group, which has C-130 transpdyt planes. The Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant, part of the U.S. Army Tank-Automo- tive and Armaments Command, has about 260 civilian employees who make tank parts, and they all work for General Dynaamics Land Systems, said GDLS spokesman Pete Keating. "Those employees could be trans- ferred to other facilities. It's too soon to tell what our decision will be." Bus spills fuel Martha Breneiser and Chris Dart of the Hazardous Material Division of Occupational Safety and Environmental Health clean up a diesel spill from a Univeristy bus in front of the Michigan League. Tax package nearly finished LANSING (AP) - Only one bill stands between Gov. John Engler and completion of his $1.5 billion tax cut plan. The House and Senate sent three of the eight bills in the governor's five-year plan to his desk yesterday. Four others were approved by both chambers last week. The House sent the last bill - to raise the personal exemption on in- come taxes by up to $550 - to the Senate for final approval. That could come today. The personal exemption will go up at least $300, from $2,100 to $2,400. It could go as high as $2,650 if May revenue projections come in $80 mil- lion higher than estimated in January. Yesterday's action came six weeks after Engler said "just do it"in unveil- ing the tax cut plan in his State of the State address. The Senate overwhelmingly passed two measures yesterday, send- ing them to the House. Those bills would reduce the Single Business Tax and would provide a tax credit for college tuition and fees. The first bill, passed 33-4, removed the costs of unemployment insurance and workers' compensation from the base of the business tax. The House approved it hours later, 76-26. What's happening in Ann Arbor today 'P The Psychology Peer Advisors Present P FOCUS GROUPS Winter 1995 EXPERIENTIAL OPPORTUNITIES IN THE FIELD OF PSYCHOLOGY Summer Volunteer Opportunities in Psychology Thursday March 2, 7:45-9:30 pm, West Lounge*, South Quad " Refreshments will be served at all events. " Faculty members and graduate students will be available to answer your questions and discuss these issues. RSVP to the Peer Advising Office at 747-3711 ALL ARE WELCOME!! 'P *WEST LOUNGE: 1ST FLOOR, FRONT ENTRANCE, WEST SIDE OF SOUTH QUAD ' GROUP MEETINGS Q AISEC Michigan, general member meeting, 662-1690, Business Ad- ministration Building, Room 1276, 6 p.m. Q Coming Out Group for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People, 763-4186, Michigan Union, LGBPO Lounge, 7- 9 p.m. Q Cycling Club, 764-7814, Angell Hall, Auditorium C, 7 p.m. Q Discussion Group for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People, 763-4186, Michigan Union, LGBPO Lounge, 5:15-7 p.m. Q Hindu Students Council, weekly meeting, 764-0604, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 8 p.m. Q La Voz Mexicana, weekly meeting, 995-1699, Michigan League, Room C, 7 p.m. Q New Italian Club, weekly get-to- gether, 668-1402, Amer's on State Street, 12:30 p.m. Q Overeaters Anonymous, 769-4958, Michigan Union, Room 3200.,12:10-1 p.m. U Undergraduate Philosophy Club, 764-8602, Michigan Union, Tap Room, 7 p.m. J WOLV Channel 70 Programming: U- Talk, 7-7:30p.m. and 7:30-8 p.m.; Burly Bear, 8-9 p.m.; MSA, 9-11 p.m. EVENTS J "Ash Wednesday Ecumenicial Taize Worship for Campus and Commu- nity," sponsored by Lutheran Cam- pus Ministry, First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Avenue, 7:30 p.m. J "Atlas Shrugged Chapters 11-12," sponsored by Students of Objectiv- ism, Michigan League, Conference Rooms 1 and 2, 7 p.m. J "Bonhoeffer's Cost of Discipline," soup and study, sponsored by Lutheran Campus Ministry, 801 S. Forest, 6 p.m. U "Incident at Oglala," conflict and community public film series. spon- sored by CREES, Lane Hall Com- mons Room, 12 noon Q "Welcome to CP&P, Office Tour," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Student Activities Build- ings, Room 3200, 5:10 p.m. Q "Winona LaDuke," sponsored by Offices of Academic Multicultural Initiatives and Minority Student Services, Michigan League, Vandenburg Room, 7:30 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES Q 76-GUIDE, 764-8433, peer coun- seling phone line, 7 p.m.-8 a.m. U Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info 76-EVENT or UM*Events on GOpherBLUE Q North Campus Information Center, North Campus Commons, 763- NCIC, 7:30 a.m.-5:50 p.m. Q Northwak, 763-WALK, Bursley Lobby, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Qi Psvchologv Acandemic Peer Advis- Ei y - : , ;y+', ;, ; ;- No matter what your plae looks like - you can find a uletr Jjin'&