C, bt Lttt1an 1ilaiIQ Vo. XCVI -No. 105 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, March 6, 1986. Ten Pages I i Panel calis campuses outmoded Associated Press killed in riots. About 30,000 blacks and several hundred whites turned the funeral into an anti-apartheid demonstration. Funeral turned demonstration Winnie Mandela, wife of jailed civil rights leader Nelson Mandela, raises her fist during a mass funeral yesterday in Johannesburg for 17 blacks tA2 sch By SUSAN GRANT The Ann Arbor School Board last night debated how it should treat students and staff members with communicable diseases like AIDS, but had not reached a decision by press time. The Superintendent's Cabinet has recommended that the board approve a policy on communicable diseases which would evaluate each situation on a case-by-case basis. Ols debate AID Under that policy, a student or staff member suspected of having a com- municable disease would be evaluated by a panel consisting of three doctors, a nurse, and three ad- ministrators. If the panel reached a unanimous decision, its recommen- dation would be binding. If it did not reach a unanimous decision, the superintendent of schools would make the final decision. A SUBSTITUTE teacher for the Ann Arbor public schools last month was discovered to have an AIDS- related virus, and the school district has effectively been following the proposed guidelines because it currently has no written policy, ac- cording to Bob Mosely, assistant superintendent for information ser- vices. Some trustees on the nine-member board expressed reservations over the amount of power school ad- ministrators would have under the policy proposed guidelines. Trustee Robert Gamble said he would rather have the review board consist exclusively of the three physicians. "It does seem to me to be a medical and not a lay or ad- ministrative position that we should consider," he said. Other board members agreed with Gamble's suggestion because the proposed policy would allow ad- See ANN ARBOR, Page 3 From staff and wire reports NEW HAVEN, Conn. - A White House advisory panel has concluded that the nation's colleges and univer- sities are weighed down with aging buildings and outmoded equipment and need more federal money, a leader of the group says. "The university and college system is not healthy at all. It is in rather a parlous condition,"~ said D. Allan Bromley, a professor of physics at Yale University and vice chairman of the White House Science Council's Panel on the Health of U.S. Univer- sities and Colleges. UNIVERSITY administrators yesterday praised the report. "Relative to other universities, we do much less than we need to. I estimate that we have a $200-300 million backlog in unmet maintenance needs. But this is a serious problem on cam- puses around the country," said Billy Frye, the University's vice president for academic affairs. Frye said these needs "range anywhere from the superficial things, the things you see when you walk into a room like the leaky roofs, to the systematic things like the elevators." "I think as far as equipment, we're not any more behind than most and ahead of a few. But in our teaching labs we're far behind industry. There's lots of places we don't have the state-of-the-art equipment, or we do but we don't have enough." "THINGS just keep wearing out faster than we can repair them," Frye said. While the panel will call for in- creased federal support of higher education along with a new scholar- ship fund for bright students, money will not solve all the system's problems, Bromley said. "We have concluded we have to develop real cultural changes...in government, universities, and in- dustry if we are really going to put together the kind of partnership that we must have if this country is going to be competitive in the world market," he said. BROMLEY was describing finding4 and recommendations made by the panel in a report scheduled for release within a month. The panel, composed of 13 leaders in education and industry and headed by Hewlett-Packard Co. Chairman See PANEL, Page 2 "e Shapiro urge By KERY MURAKAMI Amidst the debate over how the University should react to South African apartheid, University President Harold Shapiro has privately urged corporations to help blacks in South Africa attend the nation's integrated universities. Shapiro said he feels corporations should contribute funds to the two schools not segregated by race: the University of Capetown and the University of the Western Cape. These funds would be used to bolster financial aid for black students, he said. This, he said, would be a more effective means of improving educational opportunities for black South Africans than the current prac- tice of offering some students a free education in American universities. 'U' student testifies s investments in S. African universities UNDER THE program, coordinated by the South Africa Education Program, some 200 students are enrolled in more than 150 univer- sities around the country, said Hilda Mortimer, the program's acting director. The University of Michigan, which sponsors two students, uses some of the dividends from its investments in companies that do business in South Africa to pay for things like tuition, and room and board. "It seems that with the added costs of travel and housing, you could help 10 times more blacks in South Africa than by bringing them here," Shapiro said. Shapiro said he does not plan to cut Univer- sity support for the program, and as a non- profit organization, the University cannot directly contribute money to the South African universities. HE SAID, however, that he has lobbied several corporations, although he declined to comment on which he discussed the idea with. Spokesmen for the Burroughs Corp. and General Dynamics said yesterday there are no plans to change the emphasis from the South African program to funding the uriversities. Shapiro is on the board of directors of both cor- porations. Mortimer yesterday defended her organization, saying that "the chance to study in the U.S., in a non-apartheid atmosphere, is not something that can be duplicated in South Africa." Leonard Suransky, a psychology instructor at the University and a native of South Africa, said he felt a combination of both ideas would be best. "It makes sense economically that we could probably help more blacks through the univer- sities than through here. And it's good policy to do some collaboration with universities in South Africa. But it's also very wrong to stop bringing students here," he said. "It's a remarkable experience being part of a society that's not an apartheid society. Being able to go to the same movie houses as whites, the same dormitories, the same restaurants; that's impossible in South Africa." Suransky added that those blacks who graduate with a degree in the United States will eventually be among the, elite in South Africa. "It's important that the leaders of tomorrow go back with an idea of what democracy means," he said. Shapiro ...lobbies corporations Livermore cancels recruiting at SAB By ROB EARLE before House ~subeonnte By TIM DALY A University student testified Tuesday before a Federal House sub- committee on how proposed budget cuts in financial aid would affect college students. Scott Studier, an LSA senior, gave a five-minute testimony on the impor- tance of financial aid for college students. Members of the House Sub- committee on Postsecondary 'Education questioned him after his -testimony. "The subcommittee members were interested in hearing how important financial aid is for some students," Studier said. STUDIER receives -aid from a National Direct Student Loan, Guaranteed Student Loan, a Pell Grant, and a University Grant. Studier, a member of MSA's Com- See 'U,' Page 5 Lawrence Livermore Laboratories, one of the nation's largest defense contractors, canceled job interview sessions at the University's career planning and placement office scheduled for tomorrow, but will proceed with interviews at the Engineering -Placement Service and Career Education Office on North Campus. Ted Wilson, a human resources representative from Livermore, said the interviews at Career.Planning and Placement were canceled shortly before mid-winter break because nobody showed up. THE CANCELLATION aborts a rally planned at the Student Activities Building by members of Campus Against Weapons in Space and the Michigan Alliance for Disarmament. Rally organizer and law student Dmitri Iglitzin said the rally will con- tinue at the engineering placement of- fice in the Stearns Building. "If they're coming then we're going," said graduate student and Michigan Alliance for Disarmament Steering Committee member Justin Schwartz. WILSON said Livermore originally planned to recruit doctoral level physics students to work in its com- plex near San Francisco, but nobody signed up for an interview. According to Ane Richter, assistant coordinator of career planning and placement, Livermore frequently cancels interviews here because of narrow job requirements. "It's common for no one to sur- face," she said. Wilson said the interview session was not canceled owing to a fear of protesters, but Schwartz said any reason is good enough. IT'S equally fine by me if they can- celed because of pickets or because nobody signed up," he said. Schwartz said the lack of interest was encouraging and reflected a growing anti-Strategic Defense Initiative sentiment in the hard scien- ces. Livermore is a leader in SDI research and designed the Pershing, MX, and cruise missiles. The rally and leafletting were scheduled to begin in front of the SAB at 12:30 tomorrow, but Schwartz said the protesters will now target the engineering placement office. Shopping LSA junior Steve Norton (middle) shops at the Summer Job Fair yesterday in the Union. The fair was spon- sored by the Office of Career Planning and Placement. See Story, Page 3. TODAY- Oral financing TUDENTS CAN take a free bite out of their intal bills net month at the ntne nf the officials , Thomas said, who expressed "total en- thusiasm from the top on down." "This is a major project, something they've never done before," he ad- ded. As if those orally hygenic gems aren't enough to satisfy toothpaste lovers everywhere, however, Thomas points to another "major coup" - free parking. "If there's one thing that's almost impossible to pull off in Ann Arbor, it's free parking." table with his owners, has' never adjusted to con- finement. He screams at visitors, throws things and beats his traumatized cagemate Judy. To buy Chuck and Judy the therapy they need, local braches of the Humane Society of the United States and the National Anti-Vivisection Society have raised $25,000. "We have to do something about these chimps," said City Manager Julian Hirst. "We cannot provide for them - INSID- PHILIPPINES: Opinion encourages Aquino's gradual transference of power. See Page 4. El MDEEnIIEUYrE A a. --m.we * lMan Iact fmam "mI i