Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 29, 1986 g Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Residential Advisor Doug Stukenborg (center), Residential Director Becky Carr (right) and the rest of the Hunt House team strain against their South Quad rivals from Gomberg House. Hunt House eventually won the contest, which dates back to 1953. Speaker By SUSANNE SKUBIK At a College of Pharmacy symposium on Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome held Friday at Rackham amphitheater, a speaker described a new threat to the nation's health: AFRAIDS (Associated Fear Regarding AIDS.) Stacy Barbas a counselor for the Venereal Disease Action Committee in Detroit told a group of 200 pharmacists that widespread misconceptions about dispels AIDS myths the disease stop AIDS victims, members of "high-risk" populations,, and the general public from getting medical help and information. "WE REALLY do know a lot about the virus and its transmission," she said. "Still, people have irrational fears. One woman called me and wanted to know if she could catch AIDS from touching a potato chip bag that may have been touched by a member of a high-risk BUSINESS £ P44~azaz - -"I X I WC6FNSCPEDR11 ' J orx IrT F r I )o 0"4i 4PIAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. 203 E. HOOVER 662-3149 Taking courses in technical areas? Technical Readin & Problem Solving * Improve Reading Comprehension * Refine Study Methods * Polish Test-taking Skills Registration: 9/30 -10/2 at the Reading 1610 Washtenaw & Learning (near Hill St.) Skills Center Classes meet Tuesday evenings in the UGLI population." Homosexual and bisexual men, intravenous drug users, hemophiliacs, and multi- partnered heterosexuals are considered at a high risk to contract the disease. "AIDS is not an easy virus to. catch," she said. "It can only be transmitted very specific ways. You can't catch it from touching a potato chip bag or using a glass." TO AVOID AIDS, Barbas suggested a number of precautions: know your partner, try to limit the number of partners, and use a condom, there's less chance of getting any STD (sexually transmitted disease)." Barbas described a network of agencies in Michigan which work with AIDS patients and issues related to the disease, including an information service recently opened in Ann. Arbor. According to Michael Shannon, a pharmacy professor and the program's organizer, all College of Pharmacy alumni and pharmacists in Michigan were invited to the conference, which featured lectures on AIDS diagnosis, legal issues associated with the disease, and new drug therapies. Camille Armoruso, a 1958 College of Pharmacy graduate, ' came from Houston, Texas for the conference. Although she has not professionally encountered AIDS, she considers the program "very useful." 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The proposal is not a formal agreement between the Graduate Employees Organization and the University, but a compromise suggested by mediator Edmund Philips, of the Michigan Employment Relations Commission. "WE HAVE to take that (the proposed settlement) to the members now," said - GEO President, Alice Haddy, adding that nothing has been signed yet. GEO members plan to discuss the proposal this Thursday. Haddy would not discuss the proposal until then. Union officials will also ballot GEO's 1,700 members this week on the proposed settlement. If members do not approve, a strike authorization will take place, according to Haddy. Results of the balloting will be known in approximately two weeks. The Dispute between the TAs and , the University centers around economic issues. The GEO is asking for a 5.7 percent salary increase, a 10 percent tuition waiver increase, and paid TA training in all departments. According to a GEO newsletter, the University is offering a 4.7 percent salary increase, a 3 percent tuition waiver increase, and paid TA training in some departments. University officials declined to confirm or comment on Friday's proposed settlement or on any figures, stating that it would be against University policy while negotiations are in progress. Shultz greets foreign minister NEW YORK (AP)- Secretary of State George Shultz met yesterday evening with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze in a fresh attempt to win the release of American reporter Nicholas Daniloff, U.S. officials said. Shultz had no comments for reporters as he and his aides left his hotel for the Soviet United Nations mission shortly after 8 p.m. Shultz was hoping to make progress on the Daniloff case and other problems before Shevard - nadze's scheduled departure Tuesday for Canada. THE TWO met here three times last week. Shultz returned here yesterday afternoon after spending Friday and Saturday in Washington. Asked by reporters at 6:30 p.m. in his hotel lobby if he planned to meet last night with Shevard - nadze, the secretary of state said only that he had a dinner engagement with tennis star Ivan Lendl with whom he had played tennis earlier in the day. BUT other officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Shultz and Shevardnadze would meet later on. The Daniloff case is one of several obstacles blocking progress on scheduling a second summit meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Daniloff, Moscow corres- pondent for U.S. News and World Report, was arrested in Moscow last month and charged with espionage. He was released to the U.S. embassy in Moscow when U.S. officials reciprocally released accused Soviet spy Gennadiy Zakharov to Soviet officials in New York. Tax debate continues i WASHINGTON - There were gloomy predictions yesterday that the new tax code awaiting President Reagan's signature will be an economic disaster, but supporters of the sweeping package K dismissed such talk as sour grapes from special interests. "As the special interests have been unable to retain their special preferences and deductions and so forth, they've moved to this argument that this is going to mean the end of Western civilization as we know it," Treasury Secretary James Baker said on ABC. "Let me tell you someting, it is not." But a day after the Senate, by a 74-23 margin, gave final: congressional approval to the broadest overhaul of the federal tax code in a generation, politicians and economists still argued over the impact of the changes on the nation's economy. Concerns for the economy have been raised because the bill would repeal the investment tax credit, a major job-creating incentive for the past two decades, and shift $120 billion in taxes from individuals to corporations over the next five years. Shooting of officer mars Detroit's "No Crime Day" DETROIT- Detroit's first "No Crime Day" was marred by the: fatal, possibly accidental, shooting of a police officer, but hundreds of Detroiters cheered when a basketball star asked them to put fear in criminals' hearts. Officer Everett Williams of Detroit was shot and killed Saturday afternoon while he and his partner, both in uniforms, investigated a breaking-and-entering report on the city's west side. Williams, a city police officer for 12 years, was the fourth Detroit police officer to die in the line of duty this year. An unidentified man was held in the shooting, but had not been charged, police spokeswoman Allene Ray said. But the shooting didn't daunt Detroit Pistons star Isiah Thomas or Mayor Coleman Young, both of whom joined more than 1,000 people: on a downtown march and rally Saturday before a sold-out, $100-a plate dinner at Cobo Hall. Nidal fled Libya, expert says Terrorist leader Abu Nidal, feeling-the U.S. eat, has decamped from his Libyan headquarters and begun shuttling secretively among Arab capitals, says an Israeli expert on the notorious- Palestinian fugitive. Yossi Melman also writes that Israeli intelligence officials suspect Abu Nidal, blamed by some for the recent Pan Am hijacking in Pakistan and the Istanbul synagogue massacre, has ties to East European secret services. "Abu Nidal's organization is the only one which is able to maintain a secret infrastructure in Eastern Europe," Melman says in his new book "The Master Terrorist." The 215-page study, published by Adama Books of New York, is the most thorough summation yet of the deadly career of the 49-year- old Abu Nidal, born Sabry a=Banna. And it makes it clear that his group, formally called Fatah-Revolutionary Council, is by far today's single greatest Palestinian terrorist threat. Israeli intelligence specialists blame Abu Nidal for more than 100 terror attacks and 200 deaths in over 13.years, Melman reports. Needy to receive half of 'Hands Across America'funds LOS ANGELES - About half the $31.9 million gathered in the Hands Across America project will be distributed to provide food and shelter for the needy, leaders of the charity drive say. A disclosure statement filed last week with the city social services department revealed that as of July 31, the Century City- based charity run by the USA for Africa Foundation had approximately $15 million for distribution to America's poor. Organizers still wish to gather in another $7 million in uncollected pledges. If those pledges materialize, about 57 percent of the money that the May 25 transcontinental human chain amassed will go to charity. If they do not come in, the percentage will be about 47 percent. When USA for Africa President Ken Kragen first unveiled the plan for a national hand-holding show of compassion 11 months ago, he set a fund-raising goal of $50 million to $100 million and estimated expense for the event to be $18.8 million. Expenses were somewhat less than predicted. Senate nears drug bill vote WASHINGTON - The Senate is nearing passage of a $1.4 billion measure to combat drug abuse after backing off the stiffest features of a counterpart bill passed by the House ordering the military to seal U.S. borders against smugglers and establishing the death penalty in major drug cases. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said yesterday that the House's demand that the military intercept all drug shipments from abroad was absurd. Interviewed on CBS' "Face the Nation," Weinberger said the military is already "doing a very great deal," to fight drugs; including sharing intelligence data with law enforcement agencies and providing logistical help to other nations for drug raids; as was the case recently in Bolivia. The Senate plowed through a series of amendments to its bill: early yesterday before ending a marathon day that also saw the: Republican-controlled chamber pass a landmark tax-overhaul bill. It will return to the bill Tuesday afternoon. F I I IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS D Support the March of Dimes rBIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION Vol. XCVII-- No. 18 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. 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