eekend looks at S 's image cl b* IC Lit igaut 4Ia1t Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, March 7, 1986 Twelve Pages Vol. XCVI - No. 106 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily 'U' AIDS Blue munches guide lines let victims, in classes By MARC CARREL The University has accepted an in- dependent health organization's guidelines which recommend allowing AIDS victims to attend classes, as well as educating students about the disease. The American College Health Association (ACHA) indicated that students with AIDS should be given access to student unions, cafeterias, and other campus facilities. The group also recommended that residence hall staffs receive education about the disease. THE guidelines are "based on the best currently available medical in- formation and on recommendations of the Public Health Service and the } Centers for Disease Control ... '(and are) derived from the best epidemiological data," the association said in a statement. According to the statement, current AIDS research shows that the deadly disease cannot be spread through casual contact, such as coughing, sneezing, swimming, or eating food handled by an AIDS victim. Affirmative Action director Virginia Nordby, who chairs the University task force on AIDS appoin- ted last fall, said the University will adopt the guidelines, "but that is not to say they must be literally inter- See 'U' Page 2 on osU, 99-82 By STEVE WISE The result was so clear, Michigan coach Bill Frieder hardly talked about what happened in last night's 99-82 basketball win over Ohio State. Instead of breaking down the blowout, Frieder chatted about injuries, television and Saturday's conference showdown with Indiana. "It's not too complicated," said Ohio State coach Eldon Miller. "You don't have to dissect this one." Miller should know. In his last visit to Crisler Arena leading the Buckeyes, he watched his team get torn up more thoroughly than a frog in a high school biology experiment. For Michigan, Roy Tarpley stepped to the head of the class, scoring a team-high 22 points and sharing rebounding honors with Richard Tarpley's eight-foot fade away fin- Rellford. Each grabbed seven boards. ished the run, which helped him to a Tarpley also led the second half 15-point second-half showing. barrage that put the game out of THE WOLVERINES maintained reach after the first five minutes of the torrid pace for the next eight the period. That's when the minutes, stretching their lead to 28, Wolverines completed a 11-2 run to in- 82-54 with 7;35 remaining. crease their lead dto 20, 58-38. "There's no question we were ready THE 6-11, senior started the to go,". said Frieder, "maybe too scoring, hitting one free throw, and ready." then missing the second, the only one "Our kids got a good lesson today," of his 11 charity tosses that didn't fall. said Miller. "We didn't play strong Tarpley then stole an Ohio State pass, enough." hitting Butch Wade on an outlet pass THE STRENGTH deficiency came for a dunk. in great part from the absence of 7-0 Rellford tipped in a missed Tarpley senior Brad Sellers, who spent almost jumper. Tarpley followed that with a half the game on the Buckeye bench in fast-break dunk from Antoine foul trouble. The allconference cen- Joubert, who scored Michigan's next ter picked up his third foul seven basket on yet another fast break. See 'M', Page 12 'UI' Council limits non= academic sanctions Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Michigan forward Richard Rellford stuffs home two of his 12 points early in the first half of Michigan'ss 99-72 victory over Ohio State. Rellford, who scored half of his points on dunks, is watched by Buckeye Dennis Hopson. Rackham minorities organize By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN A recently formed organization of graduate minority students has the potential to play a decisive role in minority recruitment and retention at Rackham, accor- ding to several deans at the University's graduate school. The group, the Minority Organization of Rackham (M.O.R.), is growing rapidly, said Thomas LaVeist, a member of the steering committee. "ALTHOUGH in the early 70's there were similar effor- ts to organize such a group for all minority graduate students, none have been as focused as this group's," said Byron Groespeck, associate dean for Rackham ad- missions. "Such interest and activism can keep their concerns close to available surfaces," according to George Jones, Rackham's Interim Associate Dean and the ad- ministrator who provided the original impetus for the group's organization. - Last spring, Jones began a series of luncheons with graduate minority students to assess their concern and desire for such a unifying body. Once he found a core of a bout ten people, he passed the responsibility for the group on to them. "MY ROLE is essentially advisory, and I want all the success to be based upon their efforts," Jones said. Currently, the group is writing its constitution and has see MINORITIES, Page 5 By KERY MURAKAMI The University Council agreed yesterday that any punishments a hearing board applies to a student accused of violent crimes can only last up to 15 weeks. The council, working on an alternative to the ad- ministration's proposed code of non-academic conduct, also said however, if the University feels the accused still represents a threat after the sanction expires it can request another board hearing. THE BOARD would then decide whether to continue sanctions for up to another 15 weeks. These sanctions, councilmembers previously agreed, would range from barring a person from contact with a certain person or place - such as a dormitory - requiring that the accused undergo counseling. The 15 weeks, said law student Suzanne Cohen, co-chair of the council, is the minimum need to protect others while giving the accused time to rehabilitate. OPPONENTS of the code have expressed concern about giving the University the power to apply long-range punishments such as suspension or expulsion for non- academic crimes. They have said the threat of such punishments could be used to stifle dissent on campus. But councilmembers yesterday said they could justify applying sanctions tantamount to a suspension - such as 'I can understand a sanction, but we shouldn't go any further than that.' -Prof. Shaw Livermore 'U' Council member barring a student from classes - if the student represents a danger to people in the classes. Councilmembers have stressed -that "any restrictions shall be in proportion to the assessed threat and shall be the minimum necessary." "I CAN understand a sanction, but we shouldn't go any further than that," said History Prof. Shaw Livermore, one of three faculty members on the council. The council also agreed yesterday that the accused should have the right to an appeal if new evidence is un- covered after the hearing. It failed to decide, however, Historians underrate women, speaker says By DIANA KAPP Traditional conceptions of women in history must be reshaped to acknowledge that women played major roles in social historical periods ranging from the industrial revolution to peace movements in the 1960's, a visiting historian asserted last night. Carol Berkin, an American History professor at Baruch College in New York, who specializes in women's studies, said that predominantly male historians have often excluded women from the forefront of historical change. Berkin's speech in the East Quad Auditorium kicked offs the 19th an- nual Women's Weekend, sponsored by the Campus Coalition of Women. Events will continue through Sunday. "THE PAST holds the promise of answers to the present," Berkin said to the audience of 20 male and female students and community members. "Women need not move into battle witout a knowledge of successes, and failures, of the battles of the past." Berkins said her work is primarily concerned with "restoring women to their proper place in text books and classrooms because this "will provide young children with a more com- prehensive picture of what ou history was really about, and will help produce a generation which sees both men and women as integral parts of our past and present." As a long-time scholor of women in history who has written several books and tried to incorporate gender issues into school curiculums, Berkin views the work of scholars like herself as the catylysts which are causing "carefully constructed models of the past to crumble;" THESE models that exclude women from history have been created, Berkins said, because the field "has long been monopolized by white mid- dle class males who had the natural tendancy to write about things familia to them." See WOMEN, Page 5 Marcos parade shocks students By AMY GOLDSTEIN University students are shocked and disheartened with the plans to go ahead with parade welcoming former Philippines presidentuFerdinand Marcos to Honolulu this Sunday. According to Filipino graduate student Nina Carpio, this parade "will show that there's a lot of support for Marcos, and that he still holds a lot of power. It's like Marcos is alive and well." "THOSE who support Marcos will be heartened by it. Those who don't support him will get the message that they have a lot to do," she said. Ac- cording to Carpio, this means educating the world about the Marcos See STUDENTS, Page 2 raping up Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Hockey referees Dave Kronenberg (front), Dave Fisher (back left), and Ed Sneddon (back right) prepare to officiate Michigan's game against Lake Superior State College this season. For a pictorial profile of the CCHA referees, see Photostory on Page 7. TODAY S.O.B. PRESIDENT REAGAN, taking an undeleted expletive another step, held up a yellow T-shirt emblazoned with the letters "S.O.B." at a White House breakfast meeting with a grnnn nf rennrters The nresident then turned the shirt Stolen identity A MAN unexplainably riddled by debt, convicted of writing bad checks, discharged from the Air Force, and suspected of carrying AIDS finally found out why. Somebody else adopted his identity. Police in- formed Joseph Miller. 25. of Amityville. N.Y.. Wed- research revealed how the imposter ran up huge bills on Miller's credit card and was even tossed out of the Air Force using his former friend's identity. Giraud is now in the prison wing of the Nassau County Medical Center, officials said, because he said he has been diagnosed as carrying the HTLV-3 virus, related to acquired immune deficiency syndrome. "The infor- mntinn h em in;in thi,. nnri rlrnh "Mllarcam " INSIDE- SPEAKING UP: Opinion supports pluralism in the Catholic Church and Sunday's march in Washington, D.C. See Page 4. i 1