LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily -Friday, March 14, 2003 - 3 ..- ._ DAAP advocates diversity, focus on larger issues K-grams treats kids to gymnastics event at Crisler Kids, gymnastics, giveaways ... what's not to like? Michigan women's gymnastics teams up with K-grams in Crisler Arena today at 7:30 p.m. University students and their K-grams elementary school pen pals get in free to watch the 9th ranked Wolverines battle 4th ranked Nebraska. The event will include giveaways, contests, autographs and photo sessions. Group to auction lunch with 'U' pres, guitar lessons The Habitat for Humanity auction is taking place at various locations, including the Sophia B. Jones Room in the Michigan Union, the School of Art and Architecture and the School of Social Work. The auction, which started Monday, will run through tonight at 9 p.m. Items to bid on include guitar lessons, $500 off Kaplan classes, lunch with University President Mary Sue Coleman and a capella concert tickets. Royal Shakespeare residency forum hosted by prof English Prof. Ralph Williams will facilitate an open forum wrap-up dis- cussion on the Royal Shakespeare Company's residency at the University in Hale Auditorium on Monday at 7 p.m. The discussion will include a dia- logue session on the residency's plays. Scandinavian culture celebrated with music, film The Scandinavian Culture Festival will kick off with a performance by the Chamber Choir in Britton Hall tonight at 8 p.m. A film about Swedish choir director Eric Ericsson and a lecture by producer Peter Berggren will be in Britton Hall tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. The School of Music will perform at the University Reform Church tomorrow at 8 p.m. Visiting speakers explore issues of law, morals Gideon Yaffe from the University of Southern California will speak on "Con- ditional Intent and Mens Rea" tonight in the Kuenzel Room of the Union today at 3 p.m. as part of the 23rd Annual Michi- gan Colloquium in Philosophy "Moral Responsibility." Other speakers include Gary Watson from the University of Cal- ifornia at Riverside who will speak tomorrow at 9 a.m. in the Union Pendle- ton Room, and Gideon Rosen from Princeton University, who will speak tomorrow at 11 a.m., also in the Pendle- ton Room. Visiting dancers perform at Gamelan event A Javanese Gamelan concert and dance will be held in Rackham Audito- rium tonight at 8 p.m. The dancing per- formance will feature visiting dancers Wasi Bantolo and Olivia Retno Widyastuti. Chamber performs classic pieces The Michigan Chamber Players will perform in Britton Hall Sunday at 4 p.m. Selections include Weber's "Trio for Flute, Cello and Piano," Schafer's "The- seus" and Brahm's "Quartet for Piano and Strings." Series of slavery- related films presented by CAAS "The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow," a four-part PBS series showing in the Center for African American Studies library, starts Monday at 5 p.m. The first film is titled "Promises Betrayed (1865- 1896)." The other three programs run Tuesday and Wednesday at 5 p.m. and Thursday at 5:30 p.m. Extinction issues discussed by prof Jianrong Tang of Washington Uni- versity will host a colloquium titled "Attempts for Investigating Extinction of Aversive Memories" in 4448 East Hall today at 3 p.m. Novelist reads a- a a . a A By Andrew Kaplan Daily Staff Reporter While two political parties running in next week's student government elections have chosen to de-emphasize broad political issues in their plat- forms, the Defend Affirmative Action Party contin- ues to advocate race-conscious admissions and boosting minority enrollment to the University. DAAP Michigan Student Assembly presidential candidate Kate Stenvig said a key point in her party's agenda is building an April 1 rally in Wash- ington, when the U.S. Supreme Court hears cases challenging University admissions policies. "We're using a campaign to build for the march on Washington," Stenvig said. "After (last week's presidential debates), people from the other parties came up to me and said they supported a lot of the things we were saying. Even though they were run- ning against us, they definitely supported affirma- Roots SPI Continue mouth have 5I In sp tive action." But Stenvig said regardless of the Supreme Court's ruling, her party will always stand for race-conscious admissions. inter 2003 "The question of integration in educa- tion is something that's central to every 0 aYInIIs student," she said. "If your education is based on the promise of inequali- ty between people and segregation, your education is degraded, and that goes for everybody." Stenvig added a Court ruling against University admissions policies would significantly hurt black enrollment to the University -- an argument sup- ported by DAAP's website, which says without the current policies, this year's graduating Law School class would have only two black students. In addition to calling for a march on Washington, Vice-presidential candidate Cyril Cordor said the party challenges the administration to bar student tuition hikes, hire more minority faculty and increase minority enrollment at the University by expanding financial aid. "Even over the past couple years, minority enrollment has really been going down," Cordor said. "The whole point of having affirmative action is to integrate this campus." Cordor said while other parties pledge to improve campus life with the addition student amenities, DAAP believes national and internation- al issues are central to students. "The student government definitely has to take up these issues," he said. "When people say MSA shouldn't take up these issues, it sounds like people- are saying U of M has seceded as another country." "I think it is necessary for other parties to take a stance on these issues," MSA School of Education Rep. Agnes Aleobua said. "They can take a stance on Entree Plus and wireless Ethernet, but affirmative action should be first on their list." While DAAP's opponents in the election race say they believe campus upgrades will draw the most voters, affirmative action can- didates said controversial issues attract stu- dents to the polls. "I've been going to mass (assembly) meet- ings for years," Cordor said. "When these issues come up, that's when the most students come to the meetings." Last year, DAAP had 16 candidates on the election ballot. This year, 20 students have chosen to run on the party ticket. "It's skyrocketed - the number of students who are interested in running for DAAP or campaigning for DAAP," Aleobua said. "I think that is because of how close we are to the Supreme Court case." ery per- Yet, Shikaki said he was skeptical of in him the arguments being advanced by Wash- ington. He said that preoccupation with ical sci- Iraq will not diminish after the war, and dited the instead will intensify, causing regimes in osed by the region to distant themselves from the evailing United States and its policies, making it about a difficult for the United States to imple- United ment its policies. safe for The war will not only perpetuate U.S. n. and Israel interests in the Middle East, arguing but it will also make it more difficult for in Iraq Palestinians and Israelis to negotiate brces of peace after the war and also intensify radicalism, Shikaki said. questioned in lecture By Mona Rafkeq Daily Staff Reporter Using Gary Larson cartoons, exotic language examples and a demonstration of a secret childhood language she and a friend invented in 1953, linguistics Prof. Sarah Thomason analyzed how one fac- tor - individual choice - can deter- mine human language. Thomason's speech, titled "Can You Change Your Language? The Limits of Historical Determination in Linguistic Change," installed Thomason as the William J. Gedney collegiate professor of Linguistics. She is the first holder of the position. "Any feature a speaker can become conscious of, the speaker can change;' she said. Going against the tra- ditional view that individuals cannot make choices regarding changes in one's own language, Thomason illustrated that people can and do deliberately influence their speech. In the Ma'a language spoken in a small village in Tanzania, a certain sound is inserted into words, though it has no meaning. Because the word is hard to pronounce for outsiders, these Tanzanians can retain their unique accent. Thomason said other examples supporting deliberate change include synonyms from slang for the word "crazy" and the Piraha language spoken in Amazonia and Brazil. Enough of these deliberate changes can create a secret language, she added. For example, speakers of the Uisai language spoken on Bougainville Island in Papua New Guinea switched the male and female gender systems in Uisai. Thomason suggest- ed they were attempting to preserve their language when nearby villages began borrowing certain word struc- tures from it. The topic of language contact is rele- vant to students, Thomason said. "The examples were very exotic but this is something that happens on campus as well. We get students at the University who don't speak English, who want to sound more like Americans," she said. She also noted that some students did not speak standard English at home, or come a variety of places from across the United States. "This is a deliberate lan- guage change - when students undergo training or coaching to level out or fix their dialects," she said. Although Thomason's principal focus is Native American language studies, she is also interested in language con- tact, or how languages evolved. She co- authored a book called "Language Contact, Creolization and Genetic Lin- guistics." between ty and scious said HG example "He 1 to enco tas are done,"] EAKER ed from Page 1 and before you know it, they percent." ite of apparent similarities n the speakers call for diversi- the University's race-con- admissions policy, Feehery astert's position is not an e of affirmative action. believes that it is a good idea urage diversity, but that quo- not the way to get the job Feehery said. DISCUSSION Continued from Page 1 added. Yet, he presented a different argu- ment by emphasizing justice rather than sovereignty. "If the United Nations says yes, then we will be given the political right, the right to intervene. My argu- ment is different. I actually place more emphasis on another principle, which I think is of a higher value than sovereign- ty, and this principle is one of justice." "War against Iraq in my opinion is not only permissible, in fact when I say this I shock a lot of people ... to me it's a moral obligation,"he added. "Ev son with an ounce of civility should recognize this fact." But Bir Zeit University Polit ence Prof. Khalil Shikaki discre current arguments for war prop Washington, arguing that the pr conceptions in the Middle East; possible war in Iraq lie in the States' desire to make the region Israel and control oil in the region Shikaki said Washington is that a successful regime change would greatly weaken all the fo radicalism in the Middle East. I I r'4,Cb"A~flfa n~s jC. _a AlmA Cioth FESTIVAL /i Sunday, March 16, 2003 U$.OOAfA* ?OO PA 1).sIJ*, ~~~~ ~ lo f.mn4& ! t ~au L - C 'Cff ?j.* e What Do These Leaders Have in Common? If you thought pharmacy was only filling prescriptions, think again. The University of Michigan College of Pharmacy has been Gwendolyn Chivers, Chief Pharmacist, University of Michigan Health Service Gayle Crick, Manager, Global Marketing, Eli Lilly & Co. Cynthia Kirman, Manager, National Managed Pharmacy Program, General Motors Corp. developing leaders for positions in business, biotechnology, health care, the pharmaceutical industry, education, engineering, law, and other careers for 125 years. It's one reason our College is consistently ranked among the world's best. You owe it to yourself to find out about the outstanding, high-paying career opportunities available to U-M College of Pharmacy graduates. To learn more about U-M Pharmacy degree programs, visit our Web Peter Labadie, President, Williams-Labadie, LLC, a subsidiary of Leo Burnett Communications Albert Leung, President, Phyto-Technologies, Inc. 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