news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 20, 2004 - 3 Task force plans to monitor environment at 'U' 'U' to host 4th " Annual Ballroom Dance Competition The University Ballroom Dance Team will host its 4th Annual Ball- room Dance Competition tomorrow from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the Intramur- al Sports Building. Advanced cou- ples will compete from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Advance spectator tickets are $8 for adults and $4 for students. Tickets " purchased at the door are $10 for adults and $5 for students. Open Mic Night welcomes acts to Pierpont Commons Pierpont Commons Arts and Pro- grams is sponsoring Open Mic Night tonight from 8 p.m. to midnight in 0 the Pierpont Commons Atrium. All groups and individuals are welcome to perform. The winning performer, decided by the audience at the end of the night, will receive $100 and be invited to perform at next month's Open Mic Night. Lecture explains Antarctic geology The Department of Geological Sci- ences is sponsoring a lecture this after- noon from 4 to 5 p.m. in room 1528 of the C.C. Little Building. University of Massachusetts geology Prof. Rob Decon- to will give a presentation titled "Paleo- gene cooling and the early glacial history ofAntarctica." NERS students give presentations at colloquium The Nuclear Engineering and Radi- ological Sciences Colloquium will host student presentations this after- noon. Refreshments will be served at 3:45 p.m. and the presentations will begin at 4 p.m. in White Auditorium of the Cooley Building. Chinese center * screens film on massacre in Taiwan As part of the Chinese Film Series, the Center for Chinese Studies will screen the film "City of Sadness" tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Auditorium A of Angell Hall. The film, directed by Hou Hsiao-hsien, is presented in Mandarin, Taiwanese and Japanese with English subtitles. The film explores one of the most traumatic events in Taiwan's history - the massacre of 18,000 to 28,000 Tai- wanese citizens at the hands of the Nationalist Party on Feb. 28, 1947. Musical Society brings Ugandan music and dance to the 'U' The University Musical Society pres- ents a musical show "Children of Uganda," tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Power Center for the Performing Arts. The show represents the 1.7 million Ugandan children orphaned by AIDS and war. Tickets range from $18 to $40. Penn State prof lectures on fossils during seminar Anthropology Prof. Alan Walker, from Penn State University, is the fea- tured speaker for today's Biological Anthropology Seminar. Walker will give a presentation titled "Function from Fossils." The event will take place at noon in Lecture Room I of the Mod- ern Language Building. Award-winning author speaks at the Business School The School of Natural Resources and Environment will hold the Ninth Annual Sustainable Business Confer- ence and Expo on Feb. 27, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Business School. The keynote speaker will be Thomas Johnson, author of the award-winning book "Beyond Measure: Extraordinary Results through Attention to Work and People." The registration fee will be waived for University faculty and stu- dents courtesy of the Erb Institute. Physics professor to lecture on n.i4.n4iim raraahonmi*%a Proposed environmental indicators include ene'j consumptin, water use and greenhouse emissions By Ryan Jory For the Daily Sitting in seats made out of recycled drink bot- tles, members of the University community gath- ered yesterday at the Dana Natural Resources Building auditorium to discuss the first steps toward creating a framework for further environ- mental improvements on campus. The University has won awards from the Environmental Protection Agency - includ- ing the government's Energy Star award for combined heat and power - for its environ- mental record. But last semester, University President Mary Sue Coleman charged a task force to further improve the school's environmental policy. She asked the task force to compile a list of indicators that best measure the University's environmental stewardship. The task force, made up of faculty, staff and students, plans to propose seven indicators administrators should observe - such as energy consumption and greenhouse emissions. The proposal, which marks the first attempt by the University to include an envi- ronmental party in monitoring the details of its operations, will be presented to Coleman by the end of the semester. Other indicators include water use, amount of solid waste produced and percent of solid waste recycled. If Coleman approves its list, the task force will begin collecting data and publish an annual report, said SNRE Dean Rosina Bier- baum, co-chair of the environmental task force. This report will be used to judge which areas the University needs to improve. But not everyone at the meeting was com- pletely satisfied with the task force's pro- posed indicators. SNRE senior Jared Westbrook criticized the University's decentralized paper purchas- ing, which makes using recycled paper more expensive. Non-recycled paper is the least expensive, which deters departments from buying recy- cled paper, Westbrook said. Students should ask their departments to be more willing to spend extra money on recy- cled paper. Buying it in bulk may even lower the cost, he added. Doug Kelbaugh, dean of the Taubman Col- lege of Architecture and Urban Planning and co-chair of the task force, agreed that there is a large amount of paper wasted on campus. He said it was difficult to track the amount of paper used because of the decentralized man- agement of paper. RC junior Ellen Kolasky sits on the task force and co-chairs the Michigan Student Assembly Environmental Issues Commission. While she said she was pleased with Cole- man's charge for improvements, she added that she wished the task force was given a more proactive role. "We need to know the data before we can do anything about it," Kolasky said. "It's just frustrating because it takes a long time for things to get done." Tim Reynolds, SNRE representative for the Michigan Student Assembly, said he had "mixed feelings" on the task force's recom- mendations so far. "It's great that they worked to establish this but they are working within a limited scope," Reynolds said. "I wish there was more long- term vision." Reynolds asked the committee whether invest- ing only in environmentally friendly businesses was part of their recommendations. The University should only be investing in environmentally friendly companies, he said. One of the environmentally conscious pro- grams the University most prides itself on is its mass-transit system. Occupational Safety and Environmental Health director Terry Alexander said that the University has the "largest alternative-fuel transportation fleet of any university in the country," emphasizing the efficiency of the University's bus fleet. One audience member, however, expressed concern that rising housing costs may reverse transit efficiency by forcing students and faculty to live at distances requiring further transit. Kelbaugh agreed that commuting patterns are a major concern of the task force. "Travel is a big chunk of the energy pie. We can't ignore transportation. ... It's just a little harder to get our arms around that,"he said. Bierbaum and Kelbaugh also are co-chairs of an advisory group that will provide the task force with research and other technical support. Survivors recall experiences in internment camp By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter Japanese American internment survivor Mary Kamidoi won't touch mutton. In fact, she won't even eat lamb chops - it takes her back to the time she spent imprisoned in an internment camp, where mutton was a mealtime mainstay. "Today and ever since I left camp, you couldn't pay me to eat mutton," she said. Born in Stockton, Calif., she was one of the about 120,000 Japanese Americans - two-thirds of whom were American citi- zens - relocated during World War II. She and two other intern- ment survivors shared their stories with an audience of more than 50 people last night in the Michigan Union. Yesterday marked the 62nd anniversary of the day President Roosevelt signed executive order 9066, which without mention- ing Japanese Americans authorized what became the mass internment of about 120,000 individuals from that community, said history and American culture Prof. Scott Kurashige, an event organizer. Day of Remembrance events take place annually Feb. 19 around the country, he said, adding that he would like to see this kind of annual tradition started at the University. "It is very important because this was a terrible injustice that was done - the government did not issue a formal apology until 1988, when Congress passed a law authorizing an apology and redress for the deprival of constitutional rights," Kurashige said. "The Supreme Court has never overturned their wartime decisions vali- dating the mass internment." Toshi Shimoura's family found their house ransacked when they returned to Freemont, Calif. after the war. Even the items they'd taken to the police department for safekeeping were no longer there, she said. Shimoura said she remembers Dec. 7, 1941, as the day that "changed everything." She still remembers her parents' responses when they heard about the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, which precipitated the government's treatment of Japanese Americans in the years that followed. "The first reaction my parents had was ... 'What a terrible thing that's happened between the country of my birth and the country of my choice,' " she said, recalling her parents' alarm at the idea that the government no longer trusted them. "The fear factor was some- thing that paralyzed my family." She remembers what followed - the curfew, the notice in the post office announcing the upcoming evacuation and being taken to a racetrack, where they were informed they would be sleeping in the horse stalls that lined the walls and the hastily constructed army barracks in the middle of track. They ate in a stadium. "Every morning we'd go to school, they'd have us recite the Pledge of Allegiance ... but it always bothered me at the end, when it came to liberty and justice for ..... I used to mumble 'liberty and justice for some.'" - Nob Shimokochi Japanese American internment camp survivor "It was like forever standing in a line - you'd finish standing in line for breakfast and it'd almost be time to stand in line for lunch," she said, recalling the living conditions she said were "horrendous." They were moved to a camp in Topaz, Utah, where their camp- site was in a desert, a dried lake bottom. The campsite consisted of a square mile with about 36 blocks, each block with 12 barracks, a mess hall, laundry facilities and bathrooms, as well as one barrack designated a "recreation center," she said. FBI agents rounded up civilians suspected of being a threat to U.S. security, Nob Shimokochi said, then started scouring peo- ple's homes. "They'd come in and rummage through your house, looking for any kind of evidence," he said. Even though the soldiers couldn't read Japanese, they would still flip through magazines and books. Books in Japanese were a cause for suspicion, he said, and many community leaders, teachers and language instructors were taken into custody the week after the attack on Pearl Harbor. "Everybody lived in fear that they may come and arrest your par- ents," he said, recalling how a friend's parents were taken and the children were left on their own. He was also taken to a racetrack with his family - interned May 9, 1942, and taken by early September by train to Wyoming, where they had to become accustomed to large temperature drops and lived on 45 cents a day. "Every morning we'd go to school, they'd have us recite the Pledge of Allegiance ... but it always bothered me at the end, when it came to liberty and justice for all," he said. "I used to mumble 'liberty and justice for some.' And today after all these years when I hear the Pledge of Allegiance, I think about the con- centration camps." LSA junior Joseph Kim said attending last night's event brought books he is reading on internment for a class to life. "It was a first- hand look at people's experiences," he said. Nob Shimokochi speaks about his experiences in an Internment camp during WWi in the Michigan Union Pond Room yesterday during an event that marked the 62nd anniversary of the camps' establishment. He added that he was struck by the hypocrisy of the prisoners still having to pledge their allegiance to the nation and impressed that the presenters and others emerged strong, building successful lives for themselves. "Just how they survived through all that struggle and discrimina- tion and persecution ... they persevered and lived the life a true America offers - of equality, of success, the pursuit of happiness and liberty," he said. Corrections: Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com New vaccine aids certain lung cancer sufferers DALLAS (AP) - An experimental vaccine wiped out lung cancer in some patients and slowed its spread in others in a small but promising study, researchers say. Three patients injected with the vac- cine, GVAX, had no recurrence of lung cancer for more than three years after- ward, according to the study of 43 peo- ple with the most common form of the disease, non-small cell lung cancer. The findings were published in Wednesday's Journal of the National Cancer Institute. The research was funded in part by CellGenesis, a phar- maceutical company that hopes to pro- duce the vaccine. The vaccine, developed by researchers at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, is years away from reaching the market, if ever. The researchers hope to apply for Food and Drug Administration approval in three years. "The results are very promising for patients with non-small (cell) lung cancer, which is frequently resistant to chemotherapy," said Dr. John Nemunaitis. a Baylor oncologist who .._... INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY RIGHT ON CAMPUS Interested in building your resume while you're still in school? Want to work during Spring/Summer/Fall Semesters? The Michigan Daily will give you the opportunity to gain the following business experiences: * sell Advertising to local and National Businesses " Manage your own account Territory - Work in a team-oriented environment - Earn Commission-based pay Please pick up application at >Iooking for a good time? >8 day berlin/prague getaway explore the czech republic and germany! >10 day london/paris getaway experience the best of england and france! >13 day Simply italy florence, venice, rome, pisa and more! >14 day european discovery IL= Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street, 2nd Floor .. ,_ I / . i