a Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 7, 1986 Board ponders fate of teacher By SUSAN GRANT The Ann Arbor Board of Education has discussed how to deal with a male substitute teacher diagnosed as having an AIDS-related complex virus, but has yet to announce a decision. At a closed meeting Wednesday night, board members spoke with an attorney about "the risks involving the substitute," according to school district superintendent Richard Ben- jamin. Benjamin refused to elaborate, ex- cept to say, "I can reassure the community that the safety and rights of the students have been, and will continue to be, my highest priority." AIDS-related complex virus means the patient has been exposed to the AIDS virus, has swollen glands, and may have a slight fever, according to Ceasar Briefer, director of University Health Service. But the complex virus, unlike AIDS itself, does not destroy the body's immune system, Briefer added. Because substitute teachers do not have contracts with the Ann Arbor school system, Benjamin said the board at its private session also discussed whether the ill teacher should be treated as if he had regular employee rights. Benjamin would not say what the board decided. But Bob Mosely, assistant superin- tendent for information services, said "All people have civil rights. At least he will have that." The Ann Arbor News Wednesday reported that the substitute teacher threatened to sue the board if he was fired. But Errol Goldman, the school district's executive director for labor relations, said, "I cannot say that he threatened to sue, but he has retained his legal counsel who has been in touch with me." The school district currently lacks a policy on communicable diseases and how to handle employees who are af- flicted with them. In late November, school board officials began to draft such a policy - which would encom- pass AIDS - based on federal and state guidelines. The first draft calls for a planel of physicians, school of- ficials, and public health experts to decide on a case by case basis whether ill employees should remain on the job. But the school board and the general public must still discuss the draft before it is accepted as general policy. Profs, students fear violent Philippine elections (Continued from Page 1) mate Salvador Laurel belong, the non- violent sectoral opposition, that wishes to bring about political change through methods such as those used by Mahatma Gandhi; and the militant underground, which is believed to be between onc and two million strong. This includes the small communist National People's Army, which num- bers 30,000. According to University political science professor Gary Hawes, even if Aquino wins the greater percentage of the popular vote, she will be unable to take power. Hawes attributed this to both electoral fraud on the part of Marcos and his supporters, and to Marcos' control of the military. "(Aquino) does not have control of the military, which is the key," said Burgos. "If she wins, the military will have a coup," he added. BURGOS forsees an increasing militancy in the Philippines' population if Aquino should lose. "Immediately, there will be a lot of demonstrations," he said. "Then the sectoral opposition will be the ones to launch a lot of protests," including massive strikes, sit-ins, and other forms of nationally coordinated mass actions. In this way, the sectoral op- position hopes to immobilize the coun- try, and overthrow the Marcos regime. "The people will know if there's cheating becaust they're in the voting place. If they see that they'll lose all hope (to change the government). There will be civil unrest, and that will be the time for the NPA to act," said Diaz. He describes this scenario as "the last hope to remove the government in power." If Aquino manages to maintain or- der, Burgos said, she will be pressured to nationalize land presen- tly in the possession of agricultural multinationals. The Filipinos regard the land as having been stolen from them. If Marcos wins the election, U.S. advisors will look at who might suc- ceed him. If a moderate like Aquino steps into power, she may attempt to introduce economic and military reform, reduce the US presence, and write a new, more liberal constitution. Conversely, the present regime remains in power after Marcos' death and continues in the same repressive manner as Marcos, the risk of an overthrow by a group hostile to the United States is run. The direction the aftermath of the election will take largely depends on the reaction of the U.S., SAID Hawes. "It will depend on the U.S.'s willingness to look at the Philippines as a country with uniquiness and its own history and culture, instead of another arena for the U.S. versus communism," he said. Filipinos . . fearful of YOU'LL THE NEW Michigan Balfour House, (formerly Roberts and Born) STARTING AT Iv I, I 1209 FRATERNITY OR SORORITY SWEATSHIRTS ... 18.95 TEDDYBEARS .. . ... .. .. . .. . .. ... .. .. . ... . . . . 9.00 PINS................. NOW ONLY 50C Other Valentine's Gift Items A vailable SOUTH UNIVERSITY 769-6233 election violence (Continued from Page 1) southern parts of the country. But officials said the chances of a large- scale attack by the rebels were slim. Manila's Roman Catholic arch- bishop, Cardinal Jaime Sin, leader of the nation's 43 million Catholics and a frequent Marcos critic, appealed for sobriety and calm. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State 662-4536 Sunday - 9:30 & 11:00 Worship and Church School 9:30 broadcast on WNRS 1290 AM 11:00 broadcast on WAAM 1600 AM Sun. SERMON TITLE: "ON BEING SAVED" by Dr. Donald B. Strobe Wed. 7:00p.m. Communion in Chapel Fri. 7:30 p.m. Dr. Strobe's Adult Class UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw 663-5560 Dr. Paul Foelber, Interim Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Sunday Worship 9:15 and 10:30 Bible Study 9:15 Sunday and 7:30 Wednesday Sunday Supper 6:00. COVENANT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m. at Mack School 920 Miller, Ann Arbor 10:45 a.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Study Philip H. Tiews, Pastor For more information call 761-1999. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (between S. University and Hill) Sunday 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Coffee Hour - 10:30 social hall Adult Education Classes during both services Campus Group: Coordinator - Jamie Schultze Meets for Communion 7 p.m. Wednes- days. Program follows Dr. William Hillegonds - Sr. Minister AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron St. (between State & Division) . Sundays: 9:55 worship, 11:25 Bible Study groups for both Undergrads and Graduate Students. Thursdays: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS NASA eliminates weather as cause of Challenger crash WASHINGTON - NASA officials yesterday told the presidential com- mission investigating the Challenger explosion there is no reason to believe that freezing weather had anything to do with the loss of the ship and its crew. The question of low termperature effects on the shuttle's booster rockets at Cape Canaveral last week was raised repeatedly by com- mission Chairman William Rogers, citing news reports that the cold might have had a role in the disaster. President Reagan has given the commission 120 days to determine the probable cause of the shuttle explosion and recommend ways to assure it does not happen again. Also yesterday, a salvage vessel brought the pointed tip of Challenger's huge fuel tank to port, and NASA believed it located the shuttle's second rocket booster under the ocean 15 miles from the launch pad. Parisians search for bombs PARIS - Hundreds of police patrolled airports train stations, museums, and national landmarks yesterday in a bid to stop a wave of bombings that injured 20 people and prompted tourists to consider cur- tailing Paris vacations. Interior Minister Pierre Joxe dispatched an estimated 2,500 police of- ficers at large train stations and at Orly and Charles de Gaulle airports. Security was also tightened at landmarks and museums in the French capital. Police searched trains in Paris stations for suspicious packages before passengers were allowed to board. Some luggage was also inspec- ted. A large contingent of police was also guarding the Sorbonne university, where representatives of 64 nations, including 10 heads of state, were holding a conference on acid rain and drought. Prime Minister Laurent Fabius said police investigators believe Arab terrorists may be behind three bomb explosions this week, as well as the planting of a bomb on the Eiffel Tower that was safely defused. Child gives AIDS to mother ATLANTA - Federal health officials reported the first case of a child giving AIDS to his mother yesterday but said the "unusual" incident does not indicate routine contact can cause the disease. The National Centers for Disease Control said the 2-year-old child con- tracted Acquired Immunity Deficiency Syndrome through transfusion and passed it on to the mother during nursing care that involved "exten- sive unprotected exposure to the child's blood and body secretions and excretions. "Transmission of the HTLV-III-Lav (AIDS) infection from child to. parent has not been previously reported," the CDC said. The CDC, which has emphasized many times there is no evidence to show AIDS is spread by casual or household contact, said "the contact between the reported mother and child is not typical of the usual contact that could be expected in a family setting. Neo-Nazis ordered to prison SEATTLE- - Five members of the violent neo-Nazi group The Order were sentenced yesterday to prison terms of up to 100 years for their roles in a plot to overthrow the government and establish an Aryan homeland. Bruce Carroll Pierce, Randolph Duey, Gary Yarbrough, Andrew Bar- nhill, and Richard Kemp were sentenced by U.S. District Judge Walter McGovern. McGovern presided over a 3 -month trial that ended Dec. 30 with racketeering convictions for 10 members of the Nazi-like group. The remaining five are to be sentenced tomorrow. McGovern yesterday gave the defendants maximum sentences. Pierce and Duey each received consecutive 20-year sentences on five separate counts for a total of 100 years. Duey also was sentenced to an additional 55 years to be served concurrently. Yarbrough was ordered to spend 60 years in prison, concurrent with a 20-year sentence he is serving for illegal weapons possession. Barnhill was sentenced to two consecutive 20-year terms, plus an ad- ditional 30 years to run concurrently, and Kemp was sentenced to three consecutive 20-year terms. S. African blacks forced to leave homes, activists claim JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Civil rights activists charged that police and soldiers forced blacks to move from their homes for the first time in two years yesterday as a government minister predicted the eventual election of a black president in South Africa. Police and soldiers in armored trucks forced blacks to move from Moutse, northeast of Johannesburg, to the remote northern Transvaal province, said Ethel Walt, vice president of the Black Sash civil rights group. "The government has once again engaged in an old-style forced removal," she said. "In the presence of police, people are being loaded into removal trucks and their houses are being demolished." It was the first forced removal since blacks were marched at gunpoint from their traditional home at Magopa two years ago. The removal was designed to "consolidate" the community into a northern tribal homeland. Vol XCVI - No. 91 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. I I 4 Editor in Chief............ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor .......RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor.............. JERRY MARKON Features Editor..........CHRISTY RIEDEL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Marc Carrel. Dov Cohen. Laura Coughlin, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle. Amy Goldstein, Susan Grant. Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Amy Mindell, Caroline Muller, Kery Murakami, Jill Oserowsky, Joe Pigott, Kurt Serbus, Martha Sevet- son, Cheryl Wistrom, Jackie Young. Opinion Page Editor.........KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor .. . HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Ephross, David Lewis, Peter Mooney, Susanne Skubik. 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