Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 4, 1985 4 Panel advises businesses on AIDS victims IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS NEW YORK (UPI) - A group advising leading New York businesses on health issues suggested yesterday that companies force employees suf- fering from AIDS to work at home. Gay rights activists angrily called the proposal "de facto discrimination," despite the New York Business Group on Health's strong urging that osses treat workers with AIDS as they would any other seriously ill employee. THE BUSINESS Group on Health, which counts Bloomingdale's and New York Telephone Co. among its 265 members, made the suggestion at a forum on "options and constraints" in dealing with workers suffering from the fatal disease. More than 150 representatives form large and small businesses in New York questioned a panel of medical and legal experts on hiring and firing AIDS patients, benefit plans, and employee morale. "Our thesis is employers should recognize the importance of AIDS as a problem and prepare for its eruption" said Dr. Leon Warshaw, group executive director. "THEY should form fairly explicit policies and procedures. Otherwise, they'll find themselves suddenly involved in a crisis situation and as a result they will be liable to take ill-considered ac- tions, knee-jerk reactions that could boomerang," he added. Some companies have become embroiled in legal battles because they fired employees suf- fering from acquired immune deficiency syn- drome, Warshaw said. He said the Business Group on Health has received a spate of calls about AIDS in recent months. The group plans to publish guidelines by early February, but Warshaw said there were "no definitive" solutions. WARSHAW said workers with AIDS should be treated like any other seriously ill employee, war- ning there are strict state and federal anti- discrimination laws. Companies should educate their workers about AIDS and inform them of the prevailing medical opinion that the fatal illness cannot be spread by casual contact, Warshaw said. But he acknowledged that it could be difficult convincing employees that AIDS patients posed no danger in the workplace. ALTHOUGH Warshaw said most of the problems were diffused by education, he added that companies could also transfer recalcitrant employees or force an AIDS sufferer to work at home. But some gay rights organizations were angered by the proposal to force people with AIDS out of the workplace. "That suggestion is totally inappropriate," said Ron Najman of the National Gay Task Force. "It's counter-productive, and it leads to de facto discrimination. They are speaking with forked tongue here. It's opening the door to tolerating hysteria and panic." Gay men comprise the largest percentage of the more than 14,000 diagnosed AIDS cases in the United States. General Dynamics loses Many gays take precautions against AIDS (Continued from Page 1) people are going to learn the facts and see themselves at not a great risk. Then some of the hysteria will go away." JIM TOY, the male advocate of the University's Lesbian-Gay Male Of- fice, said he doesn't see a great deal of Dysteria in the local gay community - about five to 10 percent of the cam- pus population. However, the impact of heightened discrimination has teflected on gay people's self-esteem. "Some people react to discrimination by getting into behavior that is conceivably harmful to them," he said, citing such actions as trying to bury their low self-esteem in alcohol and having frequent sex with strangers. Another reaction to anti-gay sen- iments is denial, Toy said. Denial could result in some gays who believe they may be exposed to the disease failing to take the blood test which can detect the antibody that forms in response to the AIDS virus. ONLY a "small percentage of the gay population" is taking the blood test, Toy said. Kikuchi said the lack of accurate in- formation available on the disease has created members of the gay population "who still don't know much about the disease." Because of this lack of reliable in- formation, "people don't think it's going to affect them," Kikuchi said. WHEN PEOPLE personally know of cases within the local community, Kikuchi said, "it will wake them up." None of the gay men interviewed by the Daily said they knew of anyone locally who had contracted AIDS. But local gays say they are not going to wait for an Ann Arbor out- break to force them to take precautions. Many are changing their sexual habits, taking greater respon- sibility. DAVID Jackson, a member of the Michigan Gay Union, said he sees among sexually active gays a "new surge in having safe sex by taking preventative measures such as rub- bers." There is "much more emphasis on looking for a long-term partner" while having a lot of sexual partners is decreasing, Jackson said. Dr. Stephen Ross, a University Hospitals infectious disease specialist, said gays nationwide are changing their sexual practices to lower their risks of contracting AIDS. "HOMOSEXUAL populations in San Francisco and New York are changing their sexual habits by decreasing the number of contacts and increasingly using better methods to prevent the transfer of the [ D Support the March of Dimes ||||||||||Ill|||||BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTEDBY THE PUBUSHER COOKIES i NIGHT OWLS TAKE A STUDY BREAK! Y 2 Y 2 Buy 2 or more of Mrs. Peabody's cookies I or brownies after 9:00 p.m. and get a FREE beverage! COUPON MUST BE I Open till 11 p.m. daily PRESENTED WITH PURCHASE 3 715 N. University OFFER VALID THROUGH I 761CHIP DECEMBER 11, 1985 3 L.- - - m- - mN71-- V - disease," mainly by using condoms, Ross said. Health Service Director Caesar Briefer supports gays and non-gays taking added precautions to prevent the spread of the disease. "The emphasis in preventing the spread of AIDS should be in re- examining our sexual practices," he said, and not worrying about whether the guy down the hall has it. BRIEFER emphasized the avoidance of sex with strangers and the use of condoms during intercourse as important precautionary measures. A gay University graduate student who asked to be referred to as Phil, said gays do not have to react to the fear of AIDS by abstinence. To stop having sex would be harmful to their well-being, he added. If gay men are told they cannot have sex, it will be "detrimental," he said, "and people are not going to realistically do that." "ONE DOES not need to stop having sex, one needs to engage in safe sex," he said. "I have not found people in the gay community to be irresponsible," Phil said, adding that "education has to be done in the gay community in terms of safe sex." "Promiscuity is not the issue," Phil said. "The challenge is public education, and it's not being met." AIDS is "forcing people to take responsibility, not only for sex within the gay community, but within the non-gay community for forming a rational response to the issue," Phil continued. "One person dying is reason enough for this issue to be put on the table." RHA offers dating service in dormitories (Continued from Page 1) we haven't covered everywhere." According to Beth Painter, RHA president, "We were selling Monday and Tuesday, and we'll see by the response whether to extend it or not." Peter Samet, one of the represen- tatives selling the forms, said that he had sold "about 50 so far in East Quad, and I expect to sell 100 if we go another day." Concerning her, expectations for this program, Painter said "I would really like, ideally, to sell 1,000 and that figure is conceivable, but we're playing it by ear." So, if you did not get a chance this week to finish such sentences as: "After college I'm . . .", "I think money is.. .", and "I like a date who. .. " you may get a second chance in order to let a computer find you a date. right to new govt contracts WASHINGTON - General Dynamics Corp. yesterday lost its right to obtain new government contracts, one day after the firm and four former or current executives, including NASA administrator James Beggs, were indicted on fraud charges. The contract suspension, announced by the Defense Department, is the second such action imposed on the nation's third-largest defense contrac- tor this year. The latest suspension applies not only to Pentagon contrac- ts, but also to any other government work. Meanwhile, a key congressman said Beggs plans to take a leave of ab- sence as NASA administrator while he defends himself against the charges. "He is relinquishing his duties during the period in which the courts will judge the charges made in the indictment," said Rep. Don Fuqua (D- Fla.) chairman of the House Science and Technology Committee, which oversees NASA. Fuqua said he talked to Beggs yesterday afternoon and that "he informed me of his decision to step aside." McFarlane may resign WASHINGTON -President Reagan's soft-spoken national security advisor, Rober McFarlane, is said to have decided to quit at the zenith of his career following the favorable reviews of Reagan's summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. "McFarlane has decided to leave for personal reasons only," one congressional source said yesterday on condition of anonymity. "The timing is the thing I don't know yet." "No comment," said White House spokesman Edward Diereiian when asked about published reports speculating about McFarlane's departure. It was a response that served only to fuel mounting speculation that McFarlane, whose resignation has been rumored on and off for weeks, might actually be on the verge of leaving. McFarlane's own spokeswoman on the National Security Council staff, Karna Small, did not return telephone messages which were piling up on her secretary's desk. Aquino announces candidacy MANILA, THE PHILIPPINES -Corazon Aquino, wife of slain op- position leader Benigno Aquino, announced yesterday she will run again- st President Ferdinand Marcos is an early presidential election set for Feb. 7. The announcement came as Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fabian Ver, acquitted a day earlier of charges of complicity in the assasination of Aquino's husband, began a high-level shakeup in the nation's military. Bands of leftist youths roaming five areas of the city night burned tires in the streets and set off firecrackers and homemade explosives to protest the acquittal of Ver, 24 other soldiers and a civilian in the Aug. 21, 1983, murder of Aquino. Aquino, 52, announced her presidential candidacy at a news conference and offered the vice presidential spot on the opposition ticket to former. Sen. Salvador Laurel, who was also considering running for president. Israeli spies to be questioned JERUSALEM -American authorities will question three Israelis about their involvement with a U.S. Navy intelligence analyst accused of spying for Israel, and the head of the espionage unit likely will be retired, Israeli sources said yesterday. The sources said the secret department that channeled information allegedly supplied by Navy analyst Jonathon Pollard had ceased its clan- destine activities, thus keeping Israel's public pledge to dismantle the unit involved. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity. Pollard, a 31-year-old American Jew, was arrested by the FBI on Nov. 21 and accused of selling military secrets to Israel for $50,000 over the past 18 months. His wife, Anne Henderson-Pollard was arrested the next day and charged with illegal possession of national defense documents. The intelligence unit, led by former Mossad operations officer Rafael Eytan, monitored U.S. scientific and technological research through Israel's embassy and consulates in the United States, according to U.S. newspaper reports. Mossad is an agency responsible for Israel's foreign intelligence. Tax program alive, says Dole WASHINGTON -Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole said yesterday he believes the president will not reject the House Ways and Means Committee version of his tax program, but the White House said no decision has been made. "I think he wants to keep the process alive," Dole told reporters after he and other Republican congressional leaders met with Reagan at the White House. "That's the message I received, which would indicate that he is not going to reject the House Ways and Means package," Dole said. A Republican alternative tax bill discussed at the White House would lower the top individual tax rate to 37 percent, rather than 38 percent as in the committee's bill. It also would cut the top corporate rate to 33 percent by 1991, compared with 36 prescribed by the committee-approved plan. Under the GOP plan, only 75 percent of state and local taxes paid by in- dividuals could be claimed as deductions, compared with 100 percent un- der the committee's formula. Vol XCVI - No.63 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. IT'S ALL OVER CAMPUS! , tS . Y .7 DAILY! L ,T rI t' Y is ..." titi ti d ' 'i A. . ' P, 1, os"', 16\ t t .a II I / w t ,%1 , "4 A_ 1 s ~ j j 2 I I I m p act / Jazz Dance Infk~ormat: 763 11l7 Editor in Chief.................NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors.......... JODY BECKER JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors .......GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor.............THOMAS MILLER Features Editor............LAURIE DELATER City Editor ............... ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor............TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Joanne Cannella, Philip Chidel, Dov Cohen, Kysa Connett, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle, Rachel Gottlieb, Stephen Gregory, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jakelevic, Vibeke Laroi, Jerry Markon, Eric Mat- tson, Amy Mindell, Kery Murakami, Jill Oserowsky, Christy Riedel, Michael Sherman, Jennifer Smith, Jeff Widman, Cheryl Wistrom. Associate Opinion Page Editor .. KAREN KLEIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Gayle Kirshenbaum, David Lewis, Henry Park, Peter Mooney, Susanne Skubik Arts Editor ................ HOBEY ECHLIN Chief Photographer...............DAN HABIB PHOTO STAFF: Jae Kim, Scott Lituchy, John Munson, Matt Petrie, Dean Randazzo, Andi Schreiber, Darrian Smith. Sports Editor ................. TOM KEANEY Associate Sports Editors..........JOE EW NG BARB McQUADE, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL, STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha, Mark Borowsky, Debbie Frances, Liam Flaherty, Steve Green- baum, Rachel Goldman, Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Phil Johnson, Rick Kaplan, Christian Mar- tin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, AdamGOchlis, Chris Parker, Mike Redstone, Duane Roose, Jeff Rush,.Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan. Business Manager........DAWN WILLACKER Sales Manager..........MARY ANNE HOGAN Assistant Sales Manager ............ YUNA LEE Marketing Manager ......... CYNTHIA NIXON Finance Manager............ DAVID JELINEK Classified Manager ......GAYLA BROCKMAN DISPLAY SALES: Lori Baron, Sheryl Biesman, Eda Benjaku, Diane Bloom. Cindy Davis, Cathy Ellman, Debbie Feit, Brady Flower, Mason Frank- (Paalt arnilr I1~ I [ I