Non-Profi Org. U.S. POSTAGE Ann Arbor, MI PERMIT NO, 13 Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIIl, No. 12S Ann Arbor, Michigan- Friday, August 5, 1988 (*, Dodge! Spin! 'Uresponds rhrust! . . 'hese chain-mail-clad combatants aren't to U o n kill each other. It's just part of the re- th Annual Ann Arbor Medieval Festival, from 10 a.m. to dusk at the School of Saturday and Sunday. rsk of other period-dressed folks besides also take part in the festivities, includ- rs, monks, jesters, plague victims - BY PATRICK STAIGER Ransby and other speakers tried to - and wandering minstrels. The festival In reaction to the demands of the emphasize the role students can play val theatre and food. s United Coalition Against Racism, to effect social change. summer orientation officials replaced Panelists such as PRA member -Photos by John Munson . a Talk to Us theater presentation Pedro Bonio related their personal with a panel discussion about racism experiences with discrimination to and other forms of prejudice, led by the incoming first-year students. student activists. Orientation administrators can- celled Talk To Us last week, after a UCAR protest broke up one of the performances, calling them racist in their use of stereotypes to deal with Another student representative, LAGROC member Mindy Adelman, used a line from the Talk to Us skit to describe a lesbian's typical en- counter with discrimination. issues of discrimination. Talk to Us frequently uses stereo- typical scenes of prejudice to involve The panel discussion will satisfy its audience with the issues. UCAR the segment of orientation o n and other groups opposed the skits "diversity and multiculturalism" - a for raising such stereotypes without segment added last summer in re- adequately challenging them - and sponse to a UCAR demand for not being prepared to. The skits, orientation racism workshops. chosen for the workshop without the The panel discussions, which be- input of anti-racist student activists, gan yesterday, included panelists also left little time for discussion. from the Lesbian and Gay Rights However, last week's protesters Organizing Committee, the Puerto stressed that they blame the Univer- Rican Association, People Organized sity administration - and not the to Wipe Out Rape, UCAR, and an theater group - for planning an in- assistant LSA dean, David Schoem. adequate racism workshop. In the heat, panel members suc- Orientees then broke up into ceeded in keeping the attention of smaller groups and discussed their over 150 orientation students during reactions, which were diverse. Some their 7 minute speeches. The talks students discussed their experiences focused on personal and institutional with racism and other forms of levels of racism, sexism, homopho- prejudice, but others reacted nega- bia, and anti-semitism. tively to the panel. "Racism is not a Black issue or a "It sounded like a lot of radical Latino issue... it's a personal issue extremist views, possibly even a re- and a societal issue," said Barbara cruitment. I'm not an extremist. I can Ransby, who spoke for UCAR. think for myself," one orientee said.- IiArms. Nwain top permanent candidate list: Holbrook to be interim provost and BY RYAN TUTAK University President-designate James Duderstadt has asked Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert Holbrook to act as provost and vice president for academic affairs this fall until Duderstadt finds a permanent successor to his post. The top candidates for the permanent position are School of Natural Resources Dean James Crowfoot, Rackham Dean John D'Arms, and Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs Mary Ann Swain, said a source on the provost search advisory committee, adding that LSA Dean Peter Steiner is not on the list. Duderstadt, provost and vice president for academic affairs since 1986, will ask the University's Board of Regents to formally approve Holbrook's appointment at their meeting Sept. 15, but Holbrook - who re- portedly does not want the post permanently - will assume the responsibilities when Duderstadt becomes president Sept. 1. Vp this fall The 13-member search committee, made up of one student and 12 faculty and administrators, met for the first time Monday and received an initial list of 50 candidates from him. Duderstadt, who chairs the com- mittee, will present a short list of final candidates - probably three to five names - to the regents, who will choose the provost. Duderstadt would neither confirm nor deny candi- dates. But his assistant, Shirley Clarkson, said he hopes a new provost can take office winter term. If the search goes as planned, the committee will accept nominations through August, screen candidates in September, and interview the finalists in early October in time for the regents to consider the short list and interview their top choice at their monthly meeting. The source also said Duderstadt wants the short list to include one woman, one minority, and two white males. The current list of candidates includes two women and one Black.