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April 10, 1991 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1991-04-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page 2-The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 10, 1991

ISRAEL
Continued from page 1
(the West Bank) andrGaza who
are not PLO."
Baker met separately with
Palestiniansapproved by Yasser
Arafat, chair of the Palestine
Liberation Organization.
-Among other details to be re-
solied are when and where peace
talks would be held.
Levy said in his TV remarks,
"'We would want it to take place
in Washington... The sooner it hap-
pens, the happier Israel will be.
We are talking about this year."
" Baker met with Levy and then
With Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir, who had set a positive
tohe for his stop in Israel by an-
nouncing some 1,200 Palestinian
prisoners would be released this
weekend.

VAN VALEY
Continued from page 1
Throughout all of the contro-
versy, the assembly has had diffi-
culty communicating with the ad-
ministration. In February, Van
Valey condoned the efforts of stu-
dents who took over the public
comments session of the
University's Board of Regents, call-
ing themselves "the new regents."
The tensions heightened recently
when University Vice President for
Student Services Mary Ann Swain
denied Van Valey's request to speak
at the March 24 Honor's
Convocation.
"Students should care about the
administration trying to silence

their student government," Van
Valey said in response.
Swain denied the decision had
anything to do with Van Valey's
political agenda. "I see this campus
having a lot of leadershiporganiza-
tions. It has nothing to do with her
as an individual."
Continuing her farewell speech,
Van Valey urged Green to continue
to try to make the administration
give more power to the assembly.
Former Rackham Student
Government President Tracy Ore
praised Van Valey for her work on
the assembly. She said Van Valey
was treated in a sexist manner in
comparison to other "outspoken
men."
Van Valey closed by wishing the
new assembly luck over the next
year.

Columbia University awards
75th annual Pulitzer Prizes

NEW YORK (AP) - The
Washington Post and The New
York Times each won two awards
in the 1991 Pulitzer Prizes for
journalism, which were announced
yesterday.
The gold medal for public ser-
vice went to the Des Moines (Iowa)
Register for a story about a rape
victim who publicly identified her-
self and discussed the effect of the
ordeal on her life. The story, by re-
porter Jane Schorer, prompted
widespread debate about the tradi-
tional media practice of not identi-
fying rape victims.
The spot news reporting Pulit-
zer went to the staff of The Miami
Herald for stories about a local
cult leader and his followers' links
to several killings.
Greg Marinovich of The Asso-

ciated Press won the Pulitzer for
spot news photography for pictures
showing supporters of South Afri-
ca's African National Congress
killing a man they believed was a
Zulu spy. It is the 35th Pulitzer for
the AP.
The Washington Post's two
prizes went to Caryle Murphy in
the international reporting category
for her stories filed from occupied
Kuwait, and to Jim Hoagland in
the commentary category for for
his columns on events leading up
to the Gulf War and the political
problems of Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev. The Post has now won
23 Pulitzers.
The New York Times' awards
went to Serge Schmemann in in-
ternational reporting for coverage
of the reunification of Germany

Calvin and Hobbes

by Bill Watterson

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POLAND
Continued from page 1

1

'na vo

Polish Gen. Zdzislaw Ostrowski
said of the Soviet army's first pull-
out. "And we have not been in-
formed about the details of the
withdrawals planned for this year."
"We think a sooner deadline can
be agreed and this is the direction of
our negotiations," Ostrowski said.
Dubynin said the final deadline
for the departure would be agreed
on by the "political leadership" of
the two countries. Polish President
Lech Walesa is expected to travel to
Moscow in May for talks with

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Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev.
Dubynin accused Polish politi-
cians of stirring up anti-Soviet feel-
ings and complained some "try not
to remember those times" when the
Soviet Union freed Poland from the
Germans.
But he concluded: "We are going
home now. There is no alternative."
Borne-Sulinowo is not marked
on any maps. It is home to 20,000
Soviet soldiers and their families
secluded in a thick forest about 250
miles northwest of Warsaw near
Koszalin.
MSA
Continued from page 1
ported the resolution to rescind."I
don't think that we should make the
determination that chalking is free
speech," Kight added.
"This is a resolution that is po-
litically motivated. It would be in-
credible to support this resolu-
tion," said Law school Rep. Michael
Warren of the original document
passed last week.
MSA President James Green
made nominations for Student
General Counsel and Treasurer at
the beginning of the second meeting.
Both were accepted. Tim Darr gained
the counsel post and Budget
Priorities Committee Chair
Andrew Kanfer is the new MSA
Treasurer.
Another proposal scheduled for
a vote would end MSA's ties with
sister universities in El Salvador
and the Israeli-Occupied West Bank.
SAPAC
Continued from page 1
While only women are allowed to
attend the Take Back the Night
march, men will be having their
own rally against rape. SAPACalso
has a series of men's support groups
to understand their role in the rape
culture.
When asked how she felt about
Hardy's disruption during the rally,
Steiner said, "It didn't ruin the
event. In fact, I think he was a per-
fect example of what the rally was
about. I wonder if he would have in-
terrupted if a group of men were
talking about something he didn't
agree with."

and to Natalie Angier in the beat
reporting category for her repor
on a variety of scientific topic.
The Times has won 63 Pulitzers,
more than any other news
organization.
Reporters Marjie Lundstrom
and Rochelle Sharpe of Gannett
News Service won the prize for na-
tional reporting for a story that dis-
closed that hundreds of child
abuse-related deaths are und
tected each year as a result of e-
rors by medical examiners.
The 1991 prizes are the 75th
given under a trust set up by the
will of Publisher Joseph Pulitzer
and given annually by Columbia
University.
Each award carries a cash prize
of $3,000 except public service,
where a gold medal is awarded. *
FCC
approves
rules for.
kids' TV
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pop-
ular children's TV shows such as
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles"
would be deemed commercials if
replicas of the characters were
advertised during the progran
according to rules adopted yest W
day by the Federal Comm unica-
tions Commission.
Under the new guidelines, such
shows would exceed federal limits
on the amount of commercial time
in children's programs.
Congress last year limited the
number of commercials on chil-
dren's TV shows to 10 1/2 minutes
for each hour of weekend pr
gramming and 12 minutes an hour
on weekdays.
Children's advocacy groups
said the FCC did not go far enough
in adopting rules to carry out the
Children's Television Act of 1990.
A media research group said the
regulations still must withstand a
First Amendment challenge in
court.
The commission "fulfilled who
Congress expected" in developing
the rules, but could have gone far-
ther, said Peggy Charren of Action
for Children's Television.
The regulations, which take ef-
fect Oct. 1, "remind them of the
lid on commercial speech," she
said by telephone from the group's
Boston headquarters.
In advance of yesterday's meet.
ing, media groups asked the com-
mission to adopt the most lax rules
possible to enforce the Children's
Television Act while children's
advocacy groups campaigned for
strict controls. Neither side was
completely satisfied with the
commission's action.
"We wanted a definition of
program-length commercials that
tied the merchandising intention'
to the program plans," said An-
drew Schwartzman of the advo-
cacy group Media Access Project.

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A eMdignailg
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