Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 4, 1987 4 Agency wants more AIDS tests ATLANTA (AP) - Federal health of - ficials, worried by an increase in AIDS among heterosexuals, said yesterday they may recom - mend that AIDS blood tests be mandatory for all patients admitted to hospitals and even couples applying for marriage licenses. The test for antibodies to the AIDS virus now is required only for blood donors. The federal Centers for Disease Control has invited 250 public health officials to Atlanta for a public hearing to discuss its proposal, said Dr. Walter Dowdle, the CDC's AIDS director. Those invited to the hearing Feb. 24-25 include members of civil liberties groups who ,may oppose the proposal, Dowdle said. The CDC will decide after the hearing whether to make a formal proposal about ex - panded testing for AIDS. Such a recom - mendation that state hospitals or government agencies-make the tests mandatory would not be binding on them, Dowdle said. "What the meeting is really about is to ex - plore the issues related to using the test to pre vent further infection. We're looking for a public forum," Dowdle said in an interview. "We're saying these are the ways the tests might besused. Here are the justifications, here are the obstacles." One obstacle, he said, could be a concern over confidentiality. Hospitals and government agencies would have to ensure that test results remain secret to prevent discrimination against AIDS carriers, he said. He continued that the proposal is being considered now because tests for exposure to the AIDS virus have proven highly accurate and because the number of Americans who have contracted AIDS through heterosexual contact has risen from only a few in 1981 to 4 percent of the more than 30,000 confirmed cases now. Of those confirmed cases, about half have died, according to CDC figures. "The person who benefits from the test is the individual and the contacts of that indi - vidual," Dowdle said. Dowdle also said the CDC is not proposing that a person who tested positive for the AIDS antibody while applying for a marriage license be denied a license. Student leader strives to end sexism (Continued from Page 1) office. "I wanted to open up the Women's Issues Committee, to take it away from safety and turn it to education," she said. "I wanted to get people involved in it because somehow it touched upon their lives." One of Farber's projects was heightening public awareness of sexism in advertising. During Sexual Assault Awareness Days, sponsored last October by the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, Farber staffed a table in the Fishbowl with a bulletin board displaying sexist ads, encouraging students to fill out form letters and send them to the advertisers. "People were like, 'this is disgusting'," she remembered, -laughing. "People kept coming into my office with ads, and they're still bringing in more... it just took off." Farber leaned forward across her desk, which served as a landing strip for a bright orange paper airplane, and explained how she approaches issues by raising aware - ness. "Now sometimes people will make the connection between sexist advertising and exploitation of women. People can accept it because it's not radical; it's not being shoved down their throats," she said. Although the dual respon - sibilities of an MSA representative and committee chair leave Farber "hurting for time," she says she doesn't need much time to herself. "I was bored at Christmas vac - ation," she said, sighing. "People always say I'm busy, but for me I'm normal." Farber's aggressive involvement in activities began when she was growing up in Scarsdale, N.Y. According to her parents, she started playing on athletic teams when she was about six. Wendy Farber, Hillary's mother, recalled how her daughter wanted to play soccer when she was eight, but couldn't because the only team in the area was all-boys. "Paul (her father) had to become a coach to get her on the team, and he knew nothing about soccer," she said, laughing. Farber's interest in athletics carried over into junior high and high school, where she played varsity tennis for six years. But during her first year at the University, Farber was cut from the intercollegiate tennis team. "I'd always dreamed of playing intercollegiate athletics at the varsity level," she said. Her second favorite sport, LaCrosse, was vir - tually unknown in the University community two years ago. Farber was disappointed to discover that the University had no LaCrosse team, so she founded one. Acting as the three-year president and coach, she helped the club evolve into a competing tean.with equipment and uriforms. Earber laughed, remembering the blank looks and questions she got when she first carried her LaCrosse stick across campus. "It's sort of a 'Hillary Farber Creation,"' she said. "It's kind of been a baby project for me - I've made this thing grow." Maria-Paz Salas, LSA senior, was one of the first players to respond to Farber's fliers advertising the club. "I was really surprised to find that she was a freshman," Salas said. "She was really energetic about LaCrosse, and very organized. She seemed like somebody that would do something and stick with it, and that's how she really is." really want to immerse myself and see what I can make of an organization." Karen Tamborriello, the criminal justice coordinator for Project Community - a class which gives credit for public service - applauded Farber's dedication to her work. "She's very committed to trying to learn as much as pos - sible," Tamborriello said. "Hillary excelled at doing 'intake interviews' at the county jail. She volunteered to go out twice a week rather than the required once." The experience at the jail, as well as spending her sophomore year as a criminal investigator in Washington, D.C., have heightened Farber's interest in criminal law. "You look at what I do, all of my activities, and you build this huge giant of a person. At the core of that is just a person, with sensitivities and emotions like everyone else." - Hillary Farber, chairperson of MSA's Women's Issues Committee IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Buchanan quits White House WASHINGTON - Patrick Buchanan, President Reagan's combative chief of communications, added his name yesterday to a growing list of administration resignations, saying he could work for conservative causes more effectively outside the White House. Buchanan, who announced last month that he would not run for president, has seemed frustrated in his two-year campaign to get the administration follow a hardline conservative script. Announcing the resignation, presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said Buchanan "feels he can better influence the issues and politics of 1988 and the direction of the conservative movement and Republican Party by speaking and writing from a vantage point outside the White House." House overrides veto, sends clean water bill to senate WASHINGTON - All but two of Michigan's 18 congressmen joined the house majority yesterday in voting to override President Reagan's veto of a $20 billion clean water package that the president. claims is too expensive. Republican Reps, Guy Vander Jagt of Luther and William Broomfield of Birmingham were among just 26 members who went along with Reagan's last-minute plea to support his position that the: bill was a budget-buster. The 401-26 House vote to overturn the presidential veto sent the: legislation to the Senate, where Reagan again was expected to be: rebuffed in his bid to block the legislation. Michigan's two democratic senators, Donald Riegle and Carl Levin, plan to vote in favor of the override, aides said. House allows big pay raise WASHINGTON - Congress allowed itself a $12,100 pay raises, at least temporarily, when the House let pass a midnight yesterday deadline for rejecting the hefty pay increase. Democratic leaders said the House would pass Senate-approoved leg - islation on Wednesday that gives $50 million to the homeless and also disapproves the pay raise. But House Democratic Whip Tony Coelho of California said it was unclear whether that action, in fact, repeal the pay raise because the vote would take place after the midnight Tuesday deadline. Still Coelho said, "There's still going to be a vote" later to repeal the pay raise. "Don't create the impression that we've voided all oppor - tunity" for a repeal, he told reporters. Envoy Waite remains missing BEIRUT - Iran's Foreign Ministry denied reports yesterday that Anglican Church hostage negotiator Terry Waite was held by Iranian Revolutionary Guards in Lebanon. The fate of Waite remained a mystery. The emissary has not been seen since he left his hotel in Moslem west Beirut on Jan. 20, apparently for a meeting with the Shiite Moslem kidnappers. He did not elaborate. Unconfirmed reports last week said Waite was spotted in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, a Shiite stronghold and base for about 400 Iranian Revolutionary Guards. Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Nicosia quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman in Tehran as denying a U.S. news media report that Waite was in the hands of the Revolutionary Guards in the Bekaa. EXTRAS Fed. fishery fabricates effects to frighten feeding fowl SEATTLE - Quack, quack, quack, quack, quack, quack. VROOoooooooom! BOOoooom! SCREEeeech! Silence. And some peace for coho salmon fingerlings of Lake Sequalitchew, in the woods of the Army's Fort Lewis near Tacoma. Wildlife managers use miniature speedboats, a "boomer shell" that sounds like a shotgun, and a "screecher" that makes a sound like fingers to scare away fish-eating fowl. Otherwise, the lake used to fatten hatchery coho is a giant seafoood buffet with mergansers and cormorants diving for dinner. Larry Peck of the Department of Fisheries estimates that as much as 30 percent of the million fingerlings raised in the 80-acre lake each year were being eaten before the boats were introduced two years ago. Now, he estimates, the loss is closer tol0 percent. "When we've got those boats on the water, the birds are just gone," said Darrell Mills, manager of the Garrison Springs Hatchery. "We speculate they think the boats are a predator they've never seen -before." If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. Vol. XCVII -No.89 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 sub - scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Profs laud reform (ContinuedfromPage1) points out "once you start Most experts agree that encouraging the intelligentsia to Gorbachev's "glasnost" policy is a express itself you're opening the gamble. History Prof. Geoff Eley way for all sorts of things." HEALTH & FITNESS -HAIR - EXPRESS- START A SPRING BREAK CELEBRATION! With fun new looks and super savings! Indulge yourself in a sensational new style or just get in condition for fun in the sun! ~ '~~i NO APPOINTMENTS - JUST WALK IN! 621 E. William St. 663-7012 (Above Steve's Ice Cream) Daily 8-8; Sat. 8-6; Sun. 10-5 WITH COUPON WITH COUPON WITH COUPON Make waves.. _IAdd some sparkle with high- But the dozens of phone calls for the new LaCrosse team only added to the gripes of her "blind roommate," LSA junior Doris Geldres. "I didn't like her much at all," Geldres recalled. "I thought she. was very aggressive; the first minutelwalked in the door she was switching things around and taking apart the bunk beds." Farber didn't spend much time in Couzens her first term, but, according to Geldres, they became better friends second term and have been "best of friends ever since." "I saw the same qualities in her, but I started seeing them in a different light," said Geldres. "She's very caring and sensitive, and it's all genuine with her. She just has a really hard time relaxing. . she wants to get the most out of every minute of the day." Farber agreed: "I guess the best word to describe me is 'intense.' I She is majoring in political science and hopes to go to law school after graduating. Her mother, a caseworker for Pre-Trial Services in Westchester, N.Y., believes that her career influenced Farber. "When I first started interviewing prisoners, it was intimidating to her," her 'mother said. "But she was exposed to it, and began to be interested in law." "My parents tried to expose me," Farber explained. "I grew up in an affluent community and have had a nice life, at the same time they try to impress values upon us that consider generosity and the value of money." "You look at what I do, all of my activities, and you build this huge giant of a person," she said pensively. "At the core of that is just a person, with sensitivities and emotions like everyone else." Greeks protest nuiws (Continued from Page 1) explained. Cynthia Wenzel, a member of the Committee for Sane Nuclear. Policy and one of the rally's organizers, contacted Besanceney and asked Greeks for Peace to participate in Thursday's protest. Think You're Pregnant? Free Pregnancy Test Completely Confidential Family Life Services 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (Any Time) After the test ban rally, where Besanceney, an LSA junior, will speak on behalf of the group and voice its support for the protest, Greeks For Peace members will organize a forum on sexism and inclusive language, to be held after mid-winter break. Besanceney said she and Greene want the group "to deal with issues (at the University) as well as international ones like Central America and South Africa." Greeks For Peace has a secondary purpose. "We want to break the stereotype that (Greeks) do not care about social issues. If Your Hair Isn't Becoming to You - You Should Be Coming to Us. 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