2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 2, 1997 NATION/WORLD HISTORY Continued from Page refused to go to their classes because they were pres- .sured by protesters, she was unimpressed by BAM protests. "I can remember feeling that people were try- ing to intimidate me," she said. "I remember I went in a back door so I could avoid the picket lines." BAM I In 1975, emotions ran high once again, as debates still centered around minority representa- tion on campus. Student activists charged that the University's administration had not fulfilled the goals it promised BAM I supporters in 1970 - chiefly the pledge to increase minority enrollment on campus to 10 percent of the student body. These factors provided the backdrop for the genesis of BAM II on campus. Although he was not directly involved in BAM II activities, University alumnus Patrick Anderson, who was a graduate student in the American Culture pro- gram and taught undergraduate courses, said BAM 11, along with other reforms, acted as catalysts for cur- riculum shifts. "Certainly, what the '60s did was raise conscience- ness, Anderson said. University alumnus Patrick Barley, who was a stu- dent on the University's Flint campus, said BAM and its attitudes were not limited to Ann Arbor. Barley said a sense of community existed with students national- ; Jy, and the principles of BAM, as well as other move- , ments, motivated students. Barley said students today have lost the sense of togetherness enjoyed by his generation. He attributed "There's no great black leader out there to take over. Jesse Jackson? No, 1 don't think so" - Patrick Barley University alumnus this lack of cohesiveness to the absence of a central cause or figure on the national scene. "There's nothing unified. We had the Vietnam war that unified us,"Barley said. "What's a cause now, get- ting hired by Ford (Motor Company)? Am I going to get the best interview?" "There's no great black leader out there to take over. Jesse Jackson? No, I don't think so," Barley said. "There's no one whose going to electrify them like Martin Luther King." BAM Ill On March 4, 1986, BAM III held its first major rally, according to a book edited by Steneck and his wife, history lecturer Margaret Steneck. Members of the group's third installment hoped to improve the overall racial climate on campus. In response to the BAM III outcry, former University President Harold Shapiro adopted the Six-Point Plan, which introduced a formula to increase diversity and understanding between stu- dents on campus. Shapiro's plan was the basis for former University President James Duderstadt's Michigan Mandate, according to the book. The !1 s TS tt Yv State of te Colge: AnAddress 6y LSe Student Government The members of LS&A Student Government cordially invite the general student body to an informational meeting presenting our current projects and future goals. Anderson Rooms A,B,C,&D (Michigan Union) 5:00 PM, Tuesday, December 2, 1997 BE SURE READ TH MICHIGA DAILY FO UPDATS( Ross Bo PREPARATIC plan, implemented in 1988 sought to systemati- cally increase minority enrollment. Its principles are currently under fire by plaintif and propo- nents of the lawsuit. Changes in the Classroom LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg said there is more than one way to achieve diversity at the University. Not only is it through measures such as the Race and Ethnicity or language requirements, but also through offering students the opportunity to expand their ways of thinking socially and acade- mically. "There are a lot of courses that introduce stu- dents to ways of understanding the world that are rooted in different cultural experiences," Goldenberg said. "But, in a way, that's just one way to look at it." Goldenberg said the University's curriculum has traditionally reflected shifts in history. For instance, she said, the American Culture program has evolved over the years because of changes from historical to modern times. "That understanding of what it means to be an American has changed over the years" Anderson said the willingness of his concentration to allow the curriculum to evolve has benefited diver- sity in academics. "There's a degree of richness that was true for me and really enriches my professional experiences here," Anderson said. Numerous experiences contribute to and enrich stu- dents' lives, therefore expanding their knowledge and opening their minds, Goldenberg said. "I think that's what the University is all about," Goldenberg said. "It gives you a deep understanding of your own experiences." AIDS TO Continued from Page 1. well as abstinence from sex before E marriage, Stino said. Unprotected sex is a high risk factor in contracting HIV "We're hoping people will consider N waiting (for sex) because they are worth waiting for" Stino said. "We're hoping IR people will consider moral action." Sno said she also hopes to see stu- dents playing an active role in AIDS education. "We hope that more organi- zations and students on campus will be encouraged to join in the fight against AIDS," she said. NS. Alliance for AIDS Awareness is a student group that started this semester with the class Sociology 389 - Sociology of HIV/AIDS. "We're a section of Project Community," said LSA senior Jennifer Yetwin. "We established Alliance for AIDS Awareness to promote education - one of the ways that we're doing this are our activities starting with World AIDS Day,"Yetwin said. University Health Service provided the group with informational pam- phlets and condoms. "We could choose what sort of volunteerism we wanted to do and we found out that we could work with UHS to plan World AIDS Day,"Yetwin said. Members of Alliance for AIDS Awareness will be passing out condoms at bars and cafes throughout the week. They also have organized a panel discus- sion set for tomorrow in Anderson Room D of the Michigan Union at 7:30 p.m, featuring counselors and educators. "Wanting to educate the community was one of our main goals," said LSA senior Lisa Goldman, a member of Alliance forAIDS Awareness. "We had no idea where it would take us when we first started" Student opens fire, kills two, at school WEST PADUCAH, Ky-A 14-year- old boy who warned last week that "something big's going to happen" inserted earplugs, drew a gun and shot eight students who just ended a prayer meeting in a high school lobby yesterday. Two girls were killed and a third was in critical condition. The boy, who had three spare clips of ammunition and four other guns, surren- dered when Ben Strong - a pastor's son and leader of the prayer circle - grabbed the teen after he stopped shooting. Afterward, the boy told Heath High School Principal Bill Bond, "I'm sorry." "He acted just like he had been caught with some minor offense," Bond said. "Really, the main question is, why," Sheriff Frank Augustus said. "And I'm taking it that the question is not going to get answered. He himself will have to answer that, and he says he doesn't know why." Strong said the boy hung out with people who claimed to be atheists. . M ..:, ... AR U1 T E ATIO Providers promise child-safe Internet WASHINGTON -- The online industry, hoping to keep government intervention at bay, is promising to voluntari- ly provide greater access to improved anti-smut software and work to flag Internet sites that are clean enough for kids. Building upon pledges made to President Clinton in July, industry groups were meeting yesterday to discuss how to edu- cate parents about the screening tools. "There are more tools every day and it is important that a really serious effort is being made to make sure parents know they are there," said Danny Weitzner, deputy director of the Clinton Center for Democracy and Technology, a group that works to protect computer users' civil liberties. The center says all major providers of Internet access to consumers offer screen- ing technology free or at a nominal cost. Those providers, serving 14 million households, include AOL, AT&T WorldNet, CompuServe, Prodigy and Erol's. A survey of 750 families by the monthly Family PC magazine found that o 26 percent use screening software, most of them because it is built in to their web browser or offered by the online service provider. The teen, who was not identified because of his age, carried into school a .22-caliber handgun with three spare clips of ammunition, two rifles and two shotguns. He wrapped the rifles and shotguns in blankets and told curia classmates they were props for a s ence project. Defense experts call for higher security WASHINGTON - A congressional- ly-chartered panel of defense experts called yesterday for the Pentagon to put greater emphasis on defending U.S. ter- ritory against such threats as electro sabotage, terrorist strikes, missile attack and chemical or biological weapons. The nine-member National Defense Panel took issue with the Pentagon's cur- rent approach of structuring U.S. forces to fight two major regional wars nearly at once - most likely in the Persian Gulf and on the Korean Peninsula. It said the two-war scenario had deterred the Pentagon from developing ways to gua against new threats. i ARoUND THE WORL6 U.S. aplauds Japan in f lenergy talks KYOTO, Japan - After two years of preliminaries, the world's govern- ments got down to the final critical round of negotiations yesterday on controlling energy use in the 21st cen- tury to protect the planet against glob- al warming. In what promises to be 10 days of hard bargaining, the United States opened the bidding with a surprise shift of position that cheered Japan, dis- mayed Europe and put environmental- ists on a green alert. The Kyoto conference was convened to strengthen the 1992 Climate Change Treaty by setting legally binding targets for reducing industrial nations' emis- sions of carbon dioxide and other "greenhouse" gases linked to global warming. If it succeeds, it will set the energy course for much of the world for decades to come, helping change what we drive, how we produce elec- tricity, even what we feed our cattle. "These 10 days could change the history of humankind," Japan's foreign minister, Keizo Obuchi, said in wel- coming negotiators from 150 countries. The more than 2,000 delegates first must reconcile an array of differ* positions on a long list of complex issues, chief among them the size of emissions reductions. The plan Washington has offered is the most conservative on the table. Korea still talkin with IMF for $55B SEOUL, Korea - The So@ Korean government continued to press for an international bailout yesterday amid conflicting signs over whether it is prepared to take the painful econom- ic steps its would-be rescuers insist are necessary. Korean state television reported early yesterday morning in Seoul that government negotiators had struck an agreement with the International Monetary Fund for a $55 billion as tance package, which would beit largest in history. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. R : . r k I " + .4 s w s -- LIKE *', NORTH CAMPUS'? YOU'LL LOVE WILLOWTREE! 1 and 2 bedrooms Plenty of Free parking Now leasing for Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall WILLOWTREE APARTMENTS 769-1313 Look for us at the U-M Housing Fairl EHO Michigan Students. Have you seen the Internet news and information service that everyone's talking about? Up-to-the-minute Internet broadcast From leading sources Personalized to your interests The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fail and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sW scnptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.)etters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://wwwpubumich.edu/daily/, EDITORIAL STAFF Josh White Editor in Chief NEWS Jodi S. Cohen, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jeff Eldridge, Laurie Mayk, Anupama Reddy, Will Weissert. STAFF: Janet Adamy. Reilly Brennan, David Bricker, Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud, Rachel Edelman. Margene Enksen. Megan Exley, Alero Fregene. Maria Hackett, Mike Haven, Stephanie Hepburn, Debra Hirschfield. Steve Horwitz. Heather Kamins, Jeffrey Kosseff. Neal Lepsetz. Ken Mazur, Chris Metinko, Pete Meyers, William Nash, Christine M. Paik. Lee Palmer. Katie Plona. Susan T. Port. Diba Rab. Alice Robinson, Peter Romer-Friedman. Ericka M. Smith, Mike Spahn, Sam Stavis. Heather Wiggin, Kristin Wright, Jennifer Yachnin. CALENDAR: Katie Plona. EDITORIAL Erin Marsh, EdIt ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Jack Schillaci. Jason Stoffer. STAFF: Kristin Arola, Ellen Friedman. Lea Frost, Eric Hochstadt, Scott Hunter. Jason Korb, Yuki Kuniyuki. David Lai. Sarah Lockyer, James Miller, Joshua Rich. Megan Schimpf, Paul Senile, Ron Steiger, David Taub,. Matt Wimsatt, Jordan Young. SPORTS John Leroi, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nicholas J. Cotsonika. Alan Goldenbach, Jim Rose, Danielle Rumore. STAFF: T.J. Berka, Josh Borkin. Evan Braunstein, Chris Duprey. Chris Farah, Jordan Field. Mark Francescutti, Rick Freeman, John Friedberg, James Goldstein, Rick Harpster, Kim Hart, Josh Kleinbaum, Chad Kujala, Andy Latack, Fred Link, BJ. Luria, Kurt New, Sharat Raju. Pranay Reddy, Kevin Rosefield, Tracy Sandler, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Uma Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Bryan Lark, Jennifer Petlinski, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas SUB-EDITORS: Aaron Rennie (Music), Christopher Tkaczyk (Campus Arts), Joshua Rich (Film), Jessica Eaton (Books), Stephanie Jo Klein (TV/New Media). STAFF: Matthew Barrett, Cohn Bartos, Sarah Beldo, Carolyn Burtt, Neal C. Carruth, Anitha Chalam, Brian Cohen. Gabe Fajun, Chris Felax, Laura Flyer, Geordy Gantsoudes. Anna Kovalski, Emily Lambert. Stephanie Love. James Miller, Rob Mitchum. Joshua Pederson, Ryan Posly. Anders SmithLindall, Julia Shih, Gabriel Smith, Prashant Tamaskar Ted Watts.Michael Zilberman. Curtis Zimmerman. PHOTO Sara Stillman, Ed ASSISTANT EDITORS: Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn STAFF: Louis Brown, Daniel Castle, Mallory S.E. Floyd, John Kraft. Kevin Krupitzer, Kelly McKinnell. Bryan McLellan. Emily Nathan, Paul Talanian. COPY DESK Rebecca Berkun, Editor STAFF: Alison Goldman, Jason Hoyer, Debra Liss. Amber Melosi, Jen Woodward. ONLINE Adam Pollock, Editor STAFF: Marqunia Iliev, Elizabeth Lucas. GRAPHICS Jonathan Weitz, Editor STAFF: Alex Hogg, Michelle McCombs, Jordan Young. r r Check it out. -r esi ie 21LIl" -&- bTA rr RA......0- RA...--- a....:.....+.+ RA....+..t., .. 101ICIMCCC CTACC Mnadan Mnnrsa MicinAmea MnnncF arI