LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday,. October 25, 2002 - 3A CAMPUSI Get ready for a Blue Out RFK Jr. initiates celebration of Detroit River Waterkeeper Alliance President Robert Kennedy Jr. is kicking off the "Detroit River Celebration," a two-day event, with a press conference today at 1 p.m. in the Mi higan Union. Kennedy w l also speak at the Chem- istry Building auditorium at 4 p.m. and will attend a reception at 5:30 p.m. The Detroit Riverkeeper group is among 90 other members of the Waterkeeper Alliance. After serving in the Hudson River Foundation subsidiary as part of a 1984 community service sentence for heroine possession, Kennedy has gradually risen to power in the organization. Kennedy's uncle, President John F. Kennedy, founded the Peace Corps more than four decades ago on the steps of the Union. French scholar to discuss writing Prof. Jean Hebrard, inspector general for the French Ministry of Education, will be speaking on "Inventing the Material Basis for the Early Modern Diary: The Appropriation and Redeployment of Elements from Scribal Culture and School Culture," a lecture spon- sored by the Institute for the Humanities. Hebrard is from the Center for Research on Contempo- rary Brazil. The lecture begins at 4 p.m. today in the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union. Chinese film shows struggle of rural life The Center for Chinese Studies is sponsoring a screening of "Beijing Bicycle," a film by Wang Xiashaui. The movie explores a young rural boy's struggle to work as a messen- ger. When his bicycle is stolen, he finds himself on an unexpected journey. The film will be shown with Mandarin subtitles tonight at Angell Hall Auditorium A, 8 p.m.. Teenage prostitution subject of film Filmmaker Masato Harada's renowned movie, "Bounce Ko-Gals" is being shown tonight at Lorch Hall. The Center for Japanese Studies is sponsoring this film featuring teenage girls working as escorts for older men. They spend their income on the latest fashions and technolo- gies. The film begins at 7 p.m. and is in Japanese with English subtitles. Acappellooza features various a Capella groups The student a Capella group The Dicks and Janes, is hosting Acap- pellooza, a festival featuring 15 other co-ed University choruses. Two groups from Indiana Universi- ty, Ladies First, and the all-male Straight No Chaser will also be fea- tured at the event. The concert begins at 8 p.m. Saturday and will be held at the Michigan Theater. Tickets cost $8. Art lecture works with paint, abstract expressionism University of Illinois art history Prof. Jonathan Fineberg will be speaking at the Museum of Art. His lecture, titled, "Thinking in Paint," begins at 3 p.m. on Sunday. Fineberg's lecture is the Museum of Art Doris Sloan Memorial lecture and will include slide illustrations. The event is in conjunction with the museum's "The New York School Abstract Expressionism" exhibit. Forum discusses social impact of medical research All students are invited to an informal discussion of "Medical Research on Vulnerable Populations in the 21st century." Sponsored by the Life Sciences, Values and Soci- ety Program, this is intended to give members of the University commu- nity an open forum to discuss scien- tific topics. The forum, beginning Sunday at 4 p.m. is at Shaman Drum. Ethics writer brings common sense to 'U, Randy Cohen, ethics columnist for The New York Times Magazine, will discuss business ethics in the wake of the various accounting Anti-war sentiment growing slowly in domestic opinion. ALYSSSA WOOD/Daily University President Mary Sue Coleman and students show their support for the Blue Out scheduled for the Michigan football game against Michigan State on Nov. 2. Studentsaddress ac of Iminority bone marow By Emily Kraack Daily Staff Reporter Bone marrow transplants save lives. This was the message at the minority bone marrow drive held Wednesday at the Michigan Union. But these drives focus on more than just register- ing potential bone marrow donors - they also stressed the importance of finding minority bone marrow donors. "There's such a lack of minority bone marrow. That's why we put this on," said Arpi Doshi, sec- ond-year Medical student and president of United Asian American Medical Student Association. Recent drives have'tried to alleviate the shortage of minority bone marrow, which can only be trans- planted if a potential recipient can find a donor with closely matched antigens (genetically-coded proteins in the marrow). Tomr Nelis, a marrow recruiter for the Michigan Community Blood Centers, said about 80 percent of whites can find potential matches outside of their families. But because minority populations are small and not everyone registers to be a bone mar- row donor, it is much harder to find a match for minority recipients. "For non-Caucasians, the chances of finding a match are very, very low," said Jennifer Huang, a second-year Medical student and co-community service chair for UAAMSA."For people of mixed races it's very difficult. The antigens are very hard to find. ... It makes a good reason why we should get everyone registered (to donate)," Nelis said. He also stressed the importance of bone marrow in medical treatment for about 65 diseases. The most frequent diseases requiring bone marrow trans- plants include aplastic anemia and blood cancers like leukemia and lymphomas. Although the best bone marrow match usually comes from within a person's family, sometimes a marrow drive is necessary to find a match, but this can be an expensive process. Huang said the government will pay for antigen matching for minorities and will frequently cover the costs of minority bone marrow drives. The drives on Wednesday were sponsored by the MCBC, which supplies blood products to hospitals throughout Michigan. Nelis said that without a transplant, critically ill patients will die. "Bone marrow is your last opportunity." A bone marrow drive is unlike a blood drive in that people who show up for the bone mar- row drive give only a little blood to be tested, which is recorded in a national registry at the National Marrow Donor Program. The NMDP, which ran the campus bone marrow drives, has performed over 15,000 bone marrow matches since its inception in the late 1980s. However, the odds that someone registered will actually be called upon to donate marrow are small. Nelis said that of the 37,000 people registered to donate, only 200 were matched to a recipient. Along with the NMDP, the drives were conduct- ed by a number of Medical student groups, includ- ing the UAAMSA, the Latin American and Native. American Medical Association and the Black Med- ical Association. Undergraduate student groups Huaren, the Black Student Union, the Chinese Student Association, the Filipino American Student Association, the Indian American Student Association and Lambda Phi Epsilon also held a minority bone marrow drive on Wednesday in the Union. By Shabina S. Khatri Daily Staff Reporter As President Bush seeks to gain United Nations support to oust Saddam Hussein, an anti-war movement is gaining rapid momen- tum across the country and on college cam- puses. According to the latest polls from the Princeton, N.J.-based Gallup Organization, a growing number of Americans are against U.S. ground troops invading Iraq. Domestic support for the war was highest near the one-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. But unlike the 56 percent of Americans cur- rently supporting the potential war, the tragic events of Sept. 11 have motivated one woman to speak in favor of peace. Rita Lasar is a founding member of Fami- lies for Peaceful Tomorrows, an advocacy organization founded by family members of Sept. 11 victims. Lasar said she received a wake-up call after Bush's remembrance speech mentioning her brother - who would not leave behind his paraplegic co-worker in their World Trade Center office - as a hero. "My brother's death was going to be used to justify the death of thousands of people in Afghanistan who were as innocent as my brother," Lasar said. "Sometimes in my lighter moments, I think that President Bush made a big mistake because he unleashed me and now I'm dedi- cated until I die from saving people from all over ... from being killed," she added. Lasar said she and other members of the organization have traveled to countries all over the world, including Afghanistan and Japan, in hopes of spreading the message of peace. She recently spent time in Ann Arbor speaking against war in Iraq. "What we need are peaceful resolutions. We need to find ways to resolve conflict with- out killing millions of people. (Invading Iraq) will inflame the Middle East and there will be such chaos," she said. More than 100 students and Ann Arbor community members met Wednesday night at the first meeting of Anti-War Action, a newly founded group designed to organize the anti- war movement on campus. LSA sophomore Matt Hollerbach, who said he hopes to become actively involved in the group, attended the planning meeting to see what he could do about the impending war. "The reason the Vietnam War did not have the broad-based supportthe government would have liked is because of college activism," he said. "We can get the ball rolling and other colleges will follow." Hollerbach said the general consensus at Wednesday's meeting was for the group "to serve as an educational tool. Everyone wants to get out there and educate people and edu- cate ourselves so that we know what's going on," he said. Lasar said many Americans who are in favor of invading Iraq are unaware of the real truth. "What we've been doing in Iraq since the sanc- tions is just unbelievably cruel and Americans don't know. There are limbless children and adults because of depleted uranium," she said. "Americans have got to learn from what they say in church on Sunday but don't believe. All human beings are God's children." Lasar cited the media as the major reason for the public's ignorance on the issue of Iraq. "The American press will not print what the peace movement is saying, what the rest of the world is saying," she said. "If America doesn't know what's going on in the world, we will not be able to stop our government. And there will be many more terrorist attacks against us." Phillis Engelbert, a member of the Ann Arbor Peace Events Committee that Lasar spoke to, said her organization decided to hold a rally this Saturday after receiving numerous phone calls and e-mails calling for mobilization against going to war. "All these people are just coming out of the woodwork saying, 'We want to march, we want to march!' We hope to add our voices to the chorus around the country of people say- ing no to war," she said. The rally, which is scheduled to take place before the football game against Iowa, will coincide with marches around the country and across the world, including Washington, San Francisco and London. Hollerbach said Anti-War Action, which is co-sponsoring the rally, is a great example of "how broad-based the support for the anti-war movement could be." But LSA senior James Justin Wilson, a member of Young Americans for Freedom, said peace activists are operating without the facts: "The peaceniks don't have enough informa- tion to say what they're saying. Of course questioning your government is necessary and that's healthy," he said. "But in a time of war when American servicemen's lives are on the line, it seems inappropriate and treasonous." But to Lasar, those who think going to war with Iraq is patriotic are mistaken. "Peace is patriotic, trying to keep Ameri- cans safe is patriotic. Violence begets vio- lence. What (President Bush) is propagating is revenge. Revenge won't bring my brother back and the victims of Sept. 11," she said. Local candidates tackle shortage of s " viewere y+ stutmoieneith~er loArormed by P num buddies hovie. AZ parking spaces By Christopher Johnson Daily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor has often been criticized for not having sufficient transportation accessibility, and many students have horror stories about problems with try- ing to find parking. "Everyone has their cars but nowhere to take them because the size of campus compared to kids is pretty small," LSA junior Megan Stevenson said. "I've paid my share of parking tickets. I think I've paid more than any other person at school." LSA senior David Kamara said that the city has towed his car three times. "I got towed in my house because Iparked in the visitor's lot," he said. "Somebody else was in my spot. I got home late. I didn't want to knock on people's doors. But when I got up the next morning my car was gone. Towing and everything was over $100. And I could at that moment have called a tow truck on the car in my spot and parked there." Candidates for positions in the city government have heavily discussed the reformation of parking accessibility, and also promoting mass transportation as an alternative to cars during this election. Councilwoman Marcia Higgins, the Republican candidate for mayor, said the City Council should improve mass tran- sit through a closer look at its Ann Arbor Transportation Authority Board appoint- ments and that the University should provide greater opportunities for student parking. "I don't think that (the Universi- ty) has provided any new parking with all of its increased construction. It's deplorable," she said. Republican council candidate Jeff Hauptman, running in the 2nd Ward, said merging the University's mass trans- portation with the city's could provide a mnI n nnA ricvctamNP T-c ca h,a Michigan permit only," she said. Although one direct solution to the transportation problem would be the construction of new parking structures within the city, many candidates fear that building new lots would exacerbate con- gestion and the already heavy air pollu- tion in Ann Arbor. "Ann Arbor does have air pollution," said incumbent mayoral candidate John Hieftje, a Democrat. "We have 16 to 17 ozone action days each summer. They are detrimental and can really threaten your health." Many candidates, including Hieftje, proposed toconstruct a parking garage outside of the city and to use the bus sys- tem to bring people in town. "There's no sense from an environ- mental viewpoint to build more parking structures in the city, he said. "We need to provide enough transportation for people so that they feel they don't need their cars." Republican Jeff DeBoer, running in the 3rd Ward, had similar plans for park- ing outside of Ann Arbor. "You got to have parking if you want people to come downtown to patronize restaurants," he said. "Maybe there is a lack of spaces, but I don't know where you can put a new parking ramp. Maybe we should build remote lots and bring people in through AATA. Let's keep the cars out of the city." In addition to building a new structure outside of town, Hieftje also said he wants to increase accessibility for pedes- trians and bikers. He said he is devising a Pedestrian Bill of Rights similar to the one in Milwaukee, Wis. that would pro- vide more foliage and artistic sights along streets and limit the width of roads on the outer part of the city. Democrat Kim Groome, running unopposed in the 1st Ward, also said she wanted the city to enhance pedes- trian naprpccihilitii nonting to her I