Poisoned minds See Editorial, Page 4 E Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom 1E aiI Mediocre Partly sunny today, high in the up- per 60y, becoming cloudy tonight, with a high in the low 50s. Vol: XCIII, No. 17 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Doily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 28, 1982 Ten Cents Reports say Reagan less active on '~civil rights WASHINGTON (AP)- Records of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and a lawyers' study of Justice Department operations con- tradict President Reagan's claim that his administration has enforced civil rights laws more actively than its. predecessors. An EEOC document obtained by The Associated Press showed that, contrary to Reagan's recent claim to a black audience, the number of job discrimination suits approved by the commission has dropped sharply. And the independent Washington Council of Lawyers concluded in a recent report that "the administration has retreated from well-established, bipartisan civil rights policies. in several areas. Enforcement of school desegregation and fair housing laws has all but halted, according to the 138- page study. ONLY IN prosecuting police brutality and similar violent denials of in- dividuals' civil rights has the Justice Department excelled, the report said. A Reagan spokesman, Peter Roussel, said there would be no immediate comment from the White House. Reagan told a dinner for black Republicans on Sept. 15 that he usually tries to ignore personal attacks, "but one charge I will have to admit strikes at my heart every time I hear it. That's the suggestion that we Republicans are taking a less active approach to protec- ting the civil rights of all Americans. "NO MATTER how you slice it, that's just plain baloney." But Reagan went on to say, "The Justice Department has filed nine new- anti-discrimination cases against public employers and has reviewed more than 9,000 electoral changes to determine compliance with the Voting Rights Act. And that, too, is a higher level of activity than in any prior ad- ministration." The council study found these statistics, used earlier by a Justice Department official, "highly misleading, though technically ac-' curate... . Upon closer examination, a different picture emerges." THE 9,000 reviews Reagan men- tioned are those required each timea state or local government covered by the Voting Rights act makes a change in its election law. Daily Photo by ELIZABEII SCOTTI Strained view Douglas Fisher finds an eye-catching attraction at the Treasure Mart on Main St. yesterday. Adverti~sed h erpes drug may not be all itcam Ten Pages Refugees welcome French, Italians into camps From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - French and Italian peacekeeping troops, welcomed by smiling Palestinian children and women offering tea, moved into the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps yesterday, scene of the Beirut massacre. But 1,200 U.S. Marines, third com- ponent of a new peacekeeping force, remained offshore, awaiting the com- plete withdrawal of Israeli forces from this bloodied capital. THE STATE Department said 1,200 Marines were expected to land tomorrow, 400 more than previously announced. Another 600 marines will remain off-shore aboard 6th Fleet ships in reserve. Christian militiamen moved into the camps Sept. 16 and went on a three-day rampage that killed hundreds of Palestinian men, women and children Since the massacre, the camps have been gripped with the fear the militiamen will return for more killings. Lebanese authorities have reported about 600 people confirmed killed in the camps. Earlier yesterday, hundreds of women from the camps gathered tear- fully at a mass grave in Chatilla to pray for the victims. In Israel, all members of Prime Minister Menachem Begin's Cabinet, bowing to intense public pressure, are ready to support a full judicial inquiry into Israeli conduct during the camp killings, Israel Television reported. The Cabinet meets today. Begin had proposed that Israel's chief justice condtict an investigation, but without subpoena power and other attributes of a full inquiry. Israeli Justice Minister Moshe Nissim was quoted in the Israeli press as saying a formal inquiry "now seems inevitable." Israeli troops had the two Beirut camps surrounded during the massacre, and Defense Minister Ariel Sharon has acknowledged that the assault on the camps by Christian Phalangist militiamen was mounted with Israeli planning and support in an effort to root out PLO fighters reported in the camps. But he maintains that the Israelis intervened after learning that civilians were being slaughtered. By LISA SPECTOR Although marketers of HERP-EZ claim in their advertisement that the drug is the most effective treatment available for Herpes Simplex, medical officials, including University physicians and researchers, are afraid that the 'ad may be arousing false ex- pectations. The promotion, while stating that there is no known cure for Herpes, maintains that-the product's main ingredient "has been demonstrated to be a potent inactivator of Herpes Sim- plex-Virus." The ad, which has ap- peared nationwide in college newspapers, including The. Michigan Daily, and magazines such as the National Enquirer and Penthouse, of- fers the mail order tablets or drops for $19.95. "IT MAY issue false hope," said University Health Service senior physician Hernan Drobny. "It's cer- tainly misleading, and I also think it's (the product) very expensive." "There's so much panic and fear and commotion about Herpes that I don't think it's helpful," he said, referring to the large number of mail order produc- ts claiming to be a cure for Herpes. 'Unless and until carefully controlled clinical trials are done on any drug, there is no point in getting excited.' -John Drach, University pharmaceutical scientist "This advertisement implies that there is a new cure when there really isn't. That can cause problems," he said. JOE SANTILLI, a representative of Virex, Inc., the Florida-based company that is selling HERP-EZ, denies that his ads are misleading. "I'm emphasizing that this product is not a cure for her- pes," he said. "It is a treatment, not a cure." But University pharmaceutical drug scientist Dr. John Drach is also "skep- tical" of the new product. He did admit that the drug, 2, 6-di-tert-butyl-p-cresol, commonly known as BHT, was effec- tive in treating animal cells and isolated human cells when tested in the laboratory. He asserted, however, that it has not been tested on humans. "Unless and until carefully controlled clinical trials are done on any drug, there is no point in getting excited," he said. ALTHOUGH the product has not been approved by the Food and Drug Ad- ministration, Santilli said the reason is because no company, including his, was willing to invest the money necessary for the tests since the drug is already available to the public as a food preser- vative. If it gets FDA approval, Virex, Inc., could get a patent on the drug, but "why would a company want a patent on a drug you could buy in a health food store?" Santilli said. See ADVERTISED, Page 5 0 Profs give tips for writin g improved essays By LAURA FARRELL "Remember," the professor says, "your term papers are due next week. I want them concise, but not too short; daring, but accurate; literate, yet sub- tIe; fun, but all the while maintaining an air of seriousness. Most of all, I want them good." Every student at the University has faced a similar situation at least once in their stay in Ann Arbor. At times, the task may seem impossible: second guessing a professor's likes and dislikes is a hard job. ALTHOUGH professors are slow to divulge their secrets for the instant "A" paper, they're always ready to give advice. The confused paperwriter can usually get straightened out. "I look for evidence that the writer has engaged thought and knows what he is talking about," said Julie Ellison, professor of English. "I look for reac- tions to the topic, such as irritation, excitement, and confusion-a clear, honest response." And if a student is caught at home at 9 p.m. Sunday night, a term paper sitting mostly in the garbage can, Ellison has a suggestion. "THE STUDENT should openly recognize his dif- ficulty, ambiguity, and indecision, and begin to work from that," she said, explaining that paper writers should detail their problems with the topic in the paper. The good drawn between classic arguments-good writing versus good thinking. On one side are the clarity, mechanics of writing, and grammar enthusiasts, with their dictionary and style books at the ready. On the other are the content group, with their eyes constantly inspecting the thought and organization of a work. "GRAMMAR AND mechanics is a major noticeable error in most papers," said Com- munications Prof. Frank Beaver. "It's obvious that some papers are not proof-read." No professor is committed totally to good grammar or only to clear thinking. A compromise, according to most, will carry the day. "I assign papers to help students develop and exer- cise the ability to reason," said Bruce Frier, professor of classical studies. "However, I notice ex- cessive poor use of semicolons, and sloppy practices with commas." BEAVER ADDED: "Personal insight and clarity of expression is important. A student who has the ability to take documented information and syn- thesize it in a clear, organized and inciteful way, will write a good paper." While Frier admitted that there is no fixed set of See PROFS, Page 2 paper "lines of battle" are, in general, Fresh off the farm Linda Anderson and Kate Fairbanks sample the wares at the Farmer's Market. ODAY Under the gum AS A SEATTLE police officer stepped forward in a courtroom to be laced under oath for testimony, Judge Rosselle Pekelis noticed he was chewing gum. Not wanting to embarrass him, the judge said softly, "Would you just put your gum in the basket," and pointed to a nearby wastebasket. "In the basket " the offieer asked "Yesin the basket" the iudge home after she walked in and found them looting the place. The two men left, but only after Linda McDaniel moved her car so they could make a getaway. "I was upset that these people were in my house," McDaniel, 31, said after the in- cident. McDaniel said she apparently surprised the men when she arrived home about 2 p.m. and spotted a car, with its doors open, in the driveway. She went in the back way. "I saw a guy bending over my VCR cassette recorder," she said. She spotted the other man hiding behind a kitchen door, she said. Instead of fleeing, McDaniel ordered: "I want you out of my house." Later, she explained, "I guess I in Maywood, N.J. seem to think. The company is putting out yet another of the calendars, called "1983 Campus Calen- dar/The Student Body," featuring full-color pictures of "college-age males." "This one will be a pictorial fantasy of college life as seen by coeds," said Ray Baldassare, executive producer for EPI. "It isn't pornographic, just a little revealing, and clean fun." Baldassaro, who described the calendar as "a great holiday gift item," said he is plan- ning an entire line of products for the college market. Reports of the company producing off-color blue books, however. have not hen cnnfirmed. - most out of your studies with a minimum of effort," he said, " 1964 - MSU announced plans to admit a ten year old boy into the school. In previous attendance as an unofficial student, Michael Grost of Lansing, one of the youngest per- sons ever to enter college anywhere, took the equivalent of 38 hours of classroom work in history, humanities, natural science, and mathematics, and accumulated an A- average. a 1970-University President Robbin Fleming, disturbed by outbreaks of violence across the campus in recent years, I I