OPINION Page 4 Friday, September 18, 1987 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVI, No. 7 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other .cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Athletics and ethics S cott Shuger's article in the Canham and the faculty for September Ann Arbor Observer, tolerating it. "My Semester in PE 402," paints an While Shuger's criticisms may or embarrassing portrait of the Athletic may not be valid, his methods are 'Department's attitude towards questionable. The author uses the 1academics. Equally unnerving is the names of students unnecessarily to 'article itself, which can at best be sensationalize his accounts of the considered shoddy journalism. class. He unfairly quotes people . Posing as a student in an upper who were unaware he was writing ,level Phys Ed class, Shuger took an article. Also, Shuger accuses fnotes not only on the content of the several students, some still course, but on the behavior of the attending the University, of students and faculty as well. He cheating and plagiarizing without ;observed poor attendance, lax including any response from those effort, and cheating, with little named. :effort on the part of the instructor to Another flaw in Shuger's article is 1h4lt these practices. that he ignores the positive qualities sLhis may not seem surprising to of the class. The opportunity to -those skeptical of big-time athletic have the most successful Athletic "programs. However, Michigan has Director in major college sports 0always prided itself on maintaining explain the empire he created is 'high academic standards for its hardly "Mickey Mouse." The tone Eathletes.What makes this even more of the article indicates that Shuger shocking is that the course's main entered the class for the sole lecturer was none other than purpose of exposing the Athletic Michigan Athletic Director Don Department, which is reason Canham, one of the most enough to question the objectivity respected sports administrators in of the article. the country. In fact, Canham is the However slanted the author's person other athletic directors turn reporting may be, the article does to for "guidance" when their raise some disturbing questions. programs fall apart. Considering One has to wonder about the what this article indicates a s sincerity of the athletic program's happening here, one shudders to commitment to education, as well as imagine what may be occurring at the opportunities some student- less scrupulous universities. athletes are throwing away. If "My Semester in PE 402" also Shuger had written the story points fingers at many of the objectively and given those in- students, several of whom are name volved notification and a chance to athletes on campus. Shuger's daily rebut, "My Semester in PE 402" log includes accounts of who might be a more noteworthy piece. showed up, who walked out, who As it stands now, however, screwed around, and who fell Shuger's article can only be asleep. It is not clear who Shuger is considered an unprofessional attack blaming more - the students for on Don Canham and some their lack of participation or prominent Michigan athletes. Wasserman V £DoN' NET IDE. ATA To STUDPY THE EFFECTS of P~ewro1ZANC E IN VIETNAM...1 wF -you DONT HAVE D ATPR, o CANW y/oU CL-AI11 V~WA$iT $I&NIFtCANT? BUjT WE'RE S G ,Yxo S uGOr- TH K~OM 'TROOPS WA~SN'T StC tcpi~ar i I 1 { I i i a Y i i d {E t f ar a 4 N r r _ r t } r 8 r i ' 1 1 i r 1 5 i i Y 1 r r r r r r 4 t w a 4 t s a r e s / ; v l" A%~D PUQLLING OUT, Vi ICITO~y 3;'- 4 AIDS A$Pgp OF 114IS 1VOW N? By Beth Fertig The death toll for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is growing at an alarming rate. Experts predict that in the United States alone 1.5 million people are carriers of the AIDS-causing virus, while the Center For Disease Control reports that 24,000 deaths so far have been attributed to the disease. With statistics like these, immediate action is called for. Meanwhile, one of the most promising treatments for this 20th Century plague has been, in effect, ignored because of the fearful and inherently sluggish nature of the government and the medical com- munity. The treatment in question is known as AL-721, a substance derived primarily from egg yolks and lecithin, and which has by many accounts halted AIDS like no other drug. Its effect on AIDS was realized in Israel three years ago at the Weizmann Institute, where AL-721 was tested on 34 people with AIDS or ARC (AIDS Related Complex), all but two of whom have shown significant improvement. When ingested daily as a butter-like spread, AL- 721 somehow fluidizes cell membranes, changing their shape and rendering the AIDS-causing virus, HIV, ineffective. Thus, the substance works as an antivirile; a person with the HIV antibodies in his or her blood would not then develop AIDS. Furthermore, according to Yehuda Scor- nick, the Israeli doctor who conducted the tests, there are no known toxic side effects. And yet, the only drug the American public hears about is AZT. AZT, while relieving many of the symptoms of AIDS, is also extreinely toxic and very expensive. There are many painful side effects of the medication (such as regular blood transfusions, nausea, headaches, and stomach aches) and the Beth Fertig is the Daily's Arts Editor. progress average cost of the treatment is $10,000- $12,000 a year. AZT is also a failed cancer drug; it sat on the government's shelves for 17 years before being whipped through the FDA for approval as an AIDS drug. The FDA states that AIDS drugs will require less time for approval than "average drugs" due to the urgency of the situation. However, while AZT took under a year to win approval (compared with the FDA's seven year average), there are be- tween 15 and 20 other AIDS drugs on the agency's list for testing, some of which have been on that list for some time. Here in America, the FDA states that AL-721 is currently in the testing phase, as are several of the other potential AIDS drugs on its list. However, this testing has been on only a few subjects and has been preliminary at best. In medicine, skepti- cism breeds caution, a well-founded virtue; Therefore, the FDA requires very specific phases of toxicity testing. Yet, so far AL- 721 has only been tested on seven people at St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York City. In addition, doctors say that this is not the full, FDA-demanded toxicity trial - almost a year after it began - because the dosage that the patients received was constant, and not gradually increased. As for the Israeli doctor's study, the FDA refuses to ac- knowledge test results from another country. While patients from the Israeli study can testify that there are no side effects from AL-721, our own government has taken a year just to conduct a preliminary toxicity trial. Who knows how long it will be before it conducts a more legitimate one. Doctors involved with this New York study are enthusiastic about the effects of AL-721. While they caution that it would not be a good treatment for someone with the full-fledged development of AIDS, they say that it could work to halt further progression of the disease for people with early ARC. The fight against AIDS certainly does: not suffer from government funding. Over, $100 million has been ear-marked for 19 AIDS Treatment Evaluation Units. And yet, almost a year after the programs were: initiated, the units are mostly dealing with, patients' responses to AZT. In addition, the fight does not lack popular support. AIDS is a mainstream problem now; it is there on subway and bus posters, on your. network television, and in pop star Ma- donna's enormous benefit concert in New York City this past summer. Doctors an4. people all over America care very deeply. about the threat of the disease. As exemplified by President Reagan's choice of personalities for his government panel, on AIDS (including the avowedly homophobic John Cardinal O'Connor);, the war on AIDS only suffers fron: ignorance. But word has gotten out about AL-721. Stories of the few Americans who went against their doctors' advice and partici pated in the Israeli study have leaked. The gay underground, vigilantly pursuing its own means of dealing with the problenm- has taken to producing home made very sions of AL-721 and cannot reproduce the formula correctly. In addition, the California-based activist group Gay Rightr; Advocates, angered with the delay of the- AIDS treatments, has recently filed a suit , against the public health service for genocide. The story of AL-721 is a sad example of how mired the American bureaucratic: system can become in its attempts to: solve a tragic problem. Hopefully this; drug, and the many others awaiting FDA- approval, will some day soon becomc,' available to the thousands of patients with: AIDS world wide. There is not a moment' spare. r slow 4 of class L Learing oUv S tudents often ask themselves whether or not they are "getting their money's worth" at the University. This concern for getting a "good return" on a heavy financial *investment is part of what causes #the frantic class searching during the beginning of every term. The search for a quality education .at the University too often stops ;when students leave the CRISP line. The problem begins with *vocabulary; the average student's definition of education 'is surprisingly narrow. Many perceive xeducation to be only a formal, structured process of gaining new -information, worthwhile only to the :extent that it can be used in a future career. Others have learned to value the process of learning as an end in 'itself; but even many of these students fail to look beyond the classroom for learning experiences. Lside identity frequently discourages students from giving their time to anything but their classes - an attitude that can follow a student throughout college. The students sitting on the Diag today are some of those who have, successfully fought the onset of this tunnel vision, and are committed to reminding their peers of the energy -and interests they left behind. Festifall is the student's once-a-year glance at that host of organizations and clubs that help to make "the college experience" what The Big Chill said it could be. The day-long event provides students with the opportunity to truly see all that life in Ann Arbor' can offer. The selection ranges from the Glee Club to human rights organizations, and everything that falls in between. To become involved in an organization, the LETTERS: Don't support rent control To the Daily: This letter is in response to Michael Appel's letter concerning rent control dated September 16 ("Rent control campaign starts tonight", Daily, 9/17/87). It is inter- esting to note that Mr. Appel contradicts himself with de- tailed information. He men- tions that Ann Arbor has a very low vacancy rate. He goes result in a decrease in the number of new units con- structed. The maintenance of most buildings, which is already very poor, will also suffer. Unscrupulous landlords will probably profit even more greatly from this measure. As historical experience in cities such as Berkeley, New York, ) s , e /l4 d DEREGLAMO CIVIL R~c>tr$ '