LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 12, 2002 - 3 Students with kids may get new benefits Man punched in head while boxing A man was struck in the head while boxing at the Central Campus Recre- ation Building Sunday afternoon, according to Department of Public Safety reports. He was not uncon- scious, although his speech was inco- herent. He was transported to the University Hospital's Emergency Room by Huron Valley Ambulance. Car tires deflated in possible slashing A man claimed early Saturday that all four tires on his car were out of air, DPS reports state. It is still unknown if the tires were slashed or if air was let out. Class ring stolen from bookstore display in Union A vendor reported Friday afternoon that a class ring was stolen from her display set up in the Michigan Union Bookstore, according to DPS reports. The ring was from Central Michigan University. DPS has no suspects. Drunk West Quad resident given MIP A West Quad resident was incapaci- tated due to alcohol consumption early Saturday, DPS reports state. She was transported to the University Hospital's Emergency Room by Huron Valley Ambulance and issued a citation for minor in possession of alcohol. Peephole larceny in West Quad An unknown person stole a peephole from a door in West Quad Residence Hall Sunday afternoon, according to DPS reports. Cinder block used to vandalize door A cinder block was used to smash out a glass door at the Canham Natato- rium Saturday morning, DPS reports state. Officers were called in to track any suspects. The search ended in the parking lot, where it is believed that suspects got into a vehicle. There were no items stolen from the natatorium. Sick man faints in Stockwell bathroom A man in Stockwell Residence Hall was sick, fainted and hit his head on the sink before losing consciousness Saturday afternoon, according to DPS reports. His wife stated that he gained consciousness, although she called an ambulance. The man was transported to the University Hospital's Emergency Room by Huron Valley Ambulance. M-Card stolen in laundry room in less than two minutes A person's M-card was stolen from the laundry room in Markley Residence Hall Friday between 3:30 p.m. and 3:32 p.m., DPS reports state. Man hospitalized from head-butt A male was head-butted in the lip at the CCRB Friday afternoon, according to DPS reports. He was escorted to the University Hospital's Emergency Room where he was treated for a laceration on his upper lip that required stitches. Radar detector, CDs stolen from vehicle It was reported Friday night that the driver side window was smashed out of a 2000 Cadillac, DPS reports. A $300 Cobra radar detector and five compact discs were stolen. Nintendo games stolen from Mott Children's Hospital It was reported Friday afternoon that Nintendo games were stolen from an area of the Mott's Children Hospital Fri- day afternoon, according to DPS reports. - Compiled by Daily StaffReporter Jeremy Berkowitz. By Rich Everson For the Daily State Rep. Patricia Lockwood (D-Fenton) hopes to make it easier for University students with kids to continue with their higher education. In a lecture last night at the Michigan League, she pushed for the Senate approval of a bill that will provide colleges and universi- ties with funding to establish and operate par- enting student service offices on campuses statewide. The bill passed in the House last December and is currently awaiting approval from the Sen- ate Appropriations Subcommittee on Higher Edu- cation. Based on services currently offered at George- town University, the Pregnant and Parenting Stu- dent Services Act would provide $200,000 to establish four charter programs. These programs would offer benefits to preg- nant students and those with children full cover- age health care, family housing, child care, flexible or alternative academic scheduling and education concerning responsible parenting for mothers and fathers. "This bill is an education bill; my goal is to keep everyone in school to get their degree," Lockwood said. Citing the differences in incomes of female students with and without undergraduate degrees, she noted that those who graduated from college earn an average of $13,000 more per year. With 307,000 females enrolled at institutions of higher learning throughout the state, the col- lective increase would amount to nearly $4 billion dollars each year, she said. "The end result is going to be worth it, why not give that opportunity to everyone," she said. In response to a question from the audience regarding whether or not the bill would limit abortion as an option, Lockwood said abor- tion counseling would continue to be offered. But, she added, students seeking an abortion would be referred to campus health service departments instead. "This is a life bill," she said, adding that the bill would "give young people an opportunity to be good moms and dads." Though the bill is aimed toward community colleges, Leslie de Pietro, director of Univer- sity Work Life Resources, estimated that there are currently 200 students at the Uni- versity and 3,000 at Michigan State Universi- ty that are either pregnant or the guardian of a minor. De Pietro said the legislation has good inten- tions, but she believes it does not offer enough funding. Many students responded favorably to the leg- islation. LSA senior Holly Kralik, who worked last summer with a single mother of four, said she watched her co-worker struggle to balance her job and her family while working to obtain a degree at a community college. "I think the help would be great for someone like that," she said. Defend Affirmative Action Party fights for student rights ALYSSA WOOD/[i Kap Soo Chol tearfully describes her experiences as a sexual slave for Japanese soldiers at Comfort Station during WWII to a standing-room only audience. E-s ave exposes abuses of women In WWII Japan By Tomislav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter Behind the Defend Affirmative Action Party's name and its priority of developing the University into a leader for a new civil rights movement lie a variety of other goals through which the party hopes to defend the rights of all students on campus. DAAP vice presidential candidate Ben Royal said he believes affirmative action will affect students on the campus more than any other issue in the near future. Royal said the University must be the leading campus in the defense of affirmative action, citing the two law- suits pending against the University's Law School and the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, which chal- lenge the University's use of race as a factor in admis- sions. "To win these cases at the Supreme Court level, or at any level, we have to be building a new civil rights move- ment," Royal said. He added that the movement will center around "get- ting people to the trial and making sure we have a strong turnout." Royal said that DAAP representatives will try to win national support by attending other campuses and civil rights conferences. Agnes Aleobua, DAAP's presidential candidate, said if elected, the party also plans to educate students on affir- mative action. In addition to educating students, Aleobua said her party would like to bring speakers to the University, peti- tion the Supreme Court in defense of affirmative action and transport students to participate in a pro-affirmative action march in Washington. In addition to its affirmative action defense, DAAP has historically fought for the rights of all University stu- dents, Aleobua said. "One of the main things we've focused on outside of affirmative action has been the fight against sexism," she said. She added that DAAP has recently supported the fra- ternities and sororities - which she said are composed of predominantly white students - when they were "scapegoated by police and the administration." DAAP's other goals include lifting sanctions against Iraq, stopping tuition increases, fighting Anti-Semitism "To win these cases ... we have to be building a new civil rights movement." - Ben Royal DAAP vice presidential candidate MSAete$ctons Winter 2002 and anti-homosexual bigotry and supporting the Gradu- ate Employees Organization. Issues including the sanctions on Iraq are important for student government, DAAP candidate Cyril Cordor said. They affect the student government not only because they affect how minorities relate to other students on campus, but also because debating them "puts out the issues into public," he said. Aleobua said that while she feels MSA should repre- sent students' political opinions, the party also supports funding student groups and working on campus proj- ects. The slate of candidates DAAP is running to defend stu- dents' rights is dynamic and diverse because student government should be integrated, she added. "We're trying to give power to the people who have tra- ditionally been disenfranchised in our society," she said. "That means running blacks and minorities, that means running gay and lesbian students, that means running women," Aleobua said. LSA junior Neal Lyons, running in DAAP for MSA, said the candidates also have experience as student activists, which will be important when the affirmative action case is debated in the Supreme Court. He said MSA will need "true representatives and spokespeople for the student body when the national media blitz arrives on campus and begins asking repre- sentatives on student government what they feel about the defense of blacks and minorities." Royal said some of the DAAP candidates have served on MSA and many have worked with its committees on projects like "Stop the Hate." Choi served as a sex slave to the Japanese military for 11 years By Ted Borden Daily Staff Reporter Korean citizen Kap Soo Choi emotionally described her harrow- ing experience as a sexual slave to Japanese soldiers in Manchuria dur- ing World War II, speaking to a packed auditorium last night. For Choi, it was the start of life that would be marked by great tragedy. "Americans know much about Nazi atrocities during World War II, but know little about Japanese atrocities in World War II," Ok Cha Soh, president of the Washington Coalition for Comfort Women Issues, said. "It's a chapter that should not be allowed to be forgotten," she added. Soh explained that before and during World War II, as the Japan- ese military invaded and conquered areas of Southeast Asia, the govern- ment set up comfort stations. These stations were designed to hold imprisoned women who were forced them to provide sexual favors for the soldiers. She added that an estimated 200,000 women were abducted. Not until recently have former comfort women come forward, demanding the Japanese govern- ment take action to redress its abus- es, she said. Choi, through the help of a trans- lator, tearfully described how she grew up in a poor family and was eventually taken in by Japanese sol- diers, who promised her food and care. By the age of 14, she was forced into a life of sexual slavery, servic- ing as many as 40 soldiers a day. "There would be no end," Choi said. "I would have to wash up after every client and prepare for the next." She began her days at 9 a.m., worked well into the night and was granted only a half hour each day for dinner. Choi said that her sexual abuse lead to physical and emotional pain. "Some of them were very rough to me," she said. "They would beat me so bad. It would hurt, but I didn't complain and I endured it all," she added. Choi also suffered abuse at the hands of the proprietor of the Com- fort Station. "The proprietor would take me out and beat me for not being obe- dient," she said. She gave a detailed account of how soldiers would often complain to the proprietor so they could receive money back that they had paid for her services. "He told us we were in debt to him for the clothing, the food and the lodging," Choi said. She said she attempted several times to pay her way out of the sys- tem so she could return home to see her grandmother. Chinese and Russian forces even- tually liberated Choi and the other comfort women, although she said "my life at the Comfort Station doesn't even come close to what I had to go through after liberation." It took her four years to return home to Korea, where she found her grandmother and nine siblings had died. She dealt with feelings of shame and guilt. Choi eventually adopted a boy whose parents were killed in the Korean War and married an impo- tent man. The audience was visibly moved by her words. "Her story is very touching. It's amazing how she's survived," LSA senior Mimi Song said. But as Soh pointed out, the Asian holocaust is a topic that needs to be discussed and remembered. "(The Asian holocuast) has to be told before it's too late. We cannot ignore the past," she said. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS Siraj Wahhaj, 7:00 p.m., p.m., Pond Room, Michi- SERVICES Pendleton Room, Michi- Campus Information "Empowering Women in gan Union, 615-1291 gan Union Centers, 764NFO, the Global Economy", Service Careers Informa- S "Rehabilitation and Tor- info@umich.edu, or e b E n tion Open House, Sponwww.umich.edu/-info Sponsored by The Asian ti Oe oue pn S.A.F.E. Walk, 763-WALK,