Page 2-The Michigan.Daily-Friday, February 5, 1988 Pollack criticizes Pursell's vote IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports funding. Several students, including LSA senior Debbie Buchholtz, state chairperson of College Republicans, were happy about Pursell's vote but were dissatisfied with the outcome. Buchholtz said, "I am very happy with his vote. I and several other college Republicans have been lobbying in favor of this Contra aid proposal." But the negative outcome will make "the Contras have a tough time existing", Buchholtz said. "I want to aid them because without it they have no support to push for democratization of their country." Seth Klukoff, an LSA senior and editor of the Michigan Review was also pleased with the way Carl Pursell voted. "I'm glad he stuck to his principles and did not back down to local pressures for certain groups," Klukoff said. However, a Democratic candidate for Pursell's seat in November's elections and several University students criticized his stance. State Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) said of Pursell, "He clearly put the interest of the Administration over the interests of the country and the district. The U.S. has neither the right nor the interest in supporting the war in Nicaragua." Rackham graduate student Dean Baker, who unsuccesfully ran for Pursell's seat in 1986, was unavailable for comment. Baker has participated in protests against Pursell's support for the .......................................?%%~%P~.................................... .......-- - Contras in the past. He and Pollackd are both vying for their party's nomination to run against Pursell. A spokesperson for Pursell yesterday refused to comment. Thea Lee, a member of the Latin American Solidarity Committee and a Rackham graduate student, stresses that" it's a tremendous victory for us that Contra aid was defeated. We were obviously disappointed that Pursell chose to continue funding the Contras." "Right now Pursell should commit himself to seeing that this time the law is enforced and that no illegal aid is channeled to the Contras through the U.S. government," she said. .........................:...:...:..:..:....:..:.:..:.:..:.:.:..:.:.4.:.:..:.. -- - " - i' " i ii i"ti y "L'i ti a'i" " iii"'" " P i"i"L'ii" i" "'ii"""i J"Yi" ii: iiiiiii" ii"".'"'""iiiiiiiiii. " ii "i "'" i"'iiii"1Y. ii i i si " i " i i i i " i i i i " O i Oi di i i'JJ Oi i i i "'O i : " i :':.:: " ::'.::: :"::" : :".::::::: ::L ::"..::: :".L :::::.::::" :".".:::: : S : . Prof. calls the term ;JAP ' sexist anti-Semitic ,Continued from Page 1) Spencer said most students told him that being a "JAP" had nothing to do with being Jewish. But when he asked them to rank the dorms or sorority/fraternity houses in order of "JAPpiness", students consistantly ranked the dorm or sorority/fraternity with the highest Jewish population as number one. When he asked students where to find a "JAP", they told him "JAP havens", or places where "JAPS" supposedly hung out. Spencer also described "anti-JAP zones" on the Syracuse campus where you are not supposed go if you are a "JAP" because you may be harassed. One of these "zones" was a retaining wall where students would sit and study - the words "ANTI-JAP ZONE" were sprayed across the face of the wall and swastikas were painted on the seats. Spencer stressed that "JAP" is a sexist and ethic slur that could lead to violence against people who were perceived as "JAPS". He cited cartoons that had been published in the student newspaper depicting "JAPS" being obnoxious and then physically attacked. He ended his talk by saying, "We have just opened up the door on this issue. If someone calls you a 'JAP', tell them you are offended. ATTENTION! Public forum, February 8, 8PM, Pendleton Room, second floor, Michigan Union. Topic: President Fleming's Discriminatory Acts Policy. "Some praise it as a great first step toward creating a better University environment." "Some criticize the policy for violating the first amendment and many other civil liberties and civil rights," Listen to and participate in the discussion as student, faculty, and administration representatives debate the Fleming policy. Sponsors: Affirmative Action Office, Civil Liberties Board, Michigan Student Assembly, Office of Student Services. February 8, 8PM, Pendleton Room, second floor, Michigan Union. Kennedy affirms WJJX review (Coutinued from page 1) tion is sub-standard. The report said WJJX was a "marginal activity." "Our listenership is not limited. If it is, it's because our audience is limited, said Monforton. We've got the double whammy on that, because we're AM and carrier current." "In terms of quality, we are equal, if not more intense than other sta- tions in production," Monforton said. "We all work very hard down here." CANTERBURY HOUSE Worship Schedule (The Chaplaincy of the Episcopal Church to the U-M Communiy) 218 N. Division St. Sunday 5:00p.m. Eucharist at Canterbury (supper follows) Morning Prayer 7:30 a.m.,mMondayFriday Evening Prayer 5:15 p.m., Monday-Friday (Eucharist on Holy Days) Personnel experience, said Board member Kate Mishaud, a first-year LSA student, is irrelevant for a campus radio station. "How could students have any significant experi- ence if they were students?" she asked. Monforton said the report's statement that the WJJX director last year was a first-year student was un- true. Former station director Jim Lamb was a senior last year, he said. Worker injures leg in fall A Mellon-Stuart construction worker fell from the new Chemistry building's second story yesterday afternoon and fractured his right leg, a University spokesperson said. The worker, identified as 33-year old Ann Arbor resident Robert Carchedi, is listed in " g o o d condition," and was scheduled to undergo surgery last night to set the leg, the spokesperson said. No complications are expected. -By Dayna Lynn Panel says AIDS victims have obligation to warn partners LANSING - AIDS victims who fail to tell their sexual partners they have the deadly disease would face felony charges under one of 41 recom- mendations yesterday from a House Republican task force. The panel stopped short of calling for mandatory AIDS testing for the general public but said the state must do more to protect healthy people from the estimated 15,000 to 20,000 people in Michigan infected with the AIDS virus. The panel said AIDS carriers have a legal obligation to warn sexual partners they have a good chance of contracting the disease. But as long as they're up front about the virus, the state shouldn't try to prevent them from having sex, the Republican lawmakers said. The panel also suggested doctors and local health clinics be required to report the names of anyone who has been diagnosed as carrying the AIDS virus. Violence continues in Israel JERUSALEM - Palestinian protesters set fire to a bus and an Israeli civilian shot and wounded an Arab stone-thrower in clashes in the West Bank yesterday. Arab youths halted a bus carrying Palestinian workers to jobs in Is- rael, removed the workers and driver and set the vehicle ablaze near Qalqilya, the army spokesperson said. The army said another Palestinian was wounded when Arab demon- strators in the village of Sair smashed the windshield of a civilian car, and an Israeli suffered head cuts from shattered glass. A passenger in the same car got out and fired at demonstrators, wounding one, the army said. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir toured two Gaza Strip refugee camps and vowed to improve living conditions in the squalid areas, which have been a spawning ground for recent violence. State to form garbage plan LANSING - Gov. James Blanchard and key state officials launched a joint effort yesterday to develop a strategy to solve Michigan's worsening solid waste problem and make 1988, "The Year of Garbage." "Unless we act now, Michigan's solid waste problem could resemble the crisis in other areas," said Gordon Guyer, director of the State De- partment of Natural Resources. "I just can't indicate to you how pleased I am," Guyer said of the at- tention being focused on the problem this year. Sen. Vernon Ehlers (R-Grand Rapids), said that last year the state had moved to address the problems of hazardous waste and low-level radioac- tive waste and this was the year to tackle the solid waste issue., "By acting now, we can head off a future in which garbage barges float across the Great Lakes in a futile search for disposal sites," said Blan- chard. Hospitals increase patient stays CHICAGO - Hospitals with the most competition have been most likely to let surgical patients stay longer, boosting America's "medical arms race" and adding to high costs, a study has found. Doctors and patients prefer longer stays for major surgical procedures, to ensure adequate preparation before an operation, adequate recovery af- terward, and to reduce the nursing burden on family members, the study says. But researchers who studied 1982 data on almost 500,000 patients were unable to find medical reasons for longer surgical stays at high-competi- .tion hospitals, they said in today's Journal of the American Medical As- sociation. EXTRAS ib1S 4 sprin, r~ek o m akeat it. No Wheaties for the losers DENVER (AP) - When you lose a Super Bowl, you lose a chance to have your picture on breakfast tables across the land. About 12,000 boxes of Wheaties portraying the Denver Broncos as cover boys for the "Breakfast of Champions" have been donated to a California food bank, said officials of General Mills, which manufactures the breakfast cereal. General Mills released boxes featuring the Washington Redskins on Sunday after they beat Denver 42-10 for the NFL championship. Company executives, in ceremonies Wednesday at the office of Mayor Frederico Pena, said they donated the boxes to the food bank on behalf of the Broncos and their fans. They also presented Mayor Pena with a mockup of a Wheaties box bearing his picture. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. 4 01he ffitchtgan itf Vol. XCVIII-No. 88 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: January through April - $15 in Ann Arbor, $22 outside the city. 1988 spring, summer, and fall term rates not yet available. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the National Student News Service. 1?ditor in Chief...................REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Photo Editors............KAREN HANDELMAN Managing Editor........................MARTHA SEVETSON JOHNMUNSON News Editor.......................................EVE BECKER City Editor.....................................MELISSA BIRKS PHOTO STAFF: Alexandra Brez, Jessica Green, Ellen Features Editor..........................ELIZABETH ATKINS Levy, Robin Loznak, David Lubliner, Danny Stiebel, Lisa University Editor..........................KERY MURAKAMI Wax. NEWS STAFF: Vicki Bauer, Dov Cohen, Hampton Weekend Editors.......................STEPHEN GREGORY Dellinger, Ken Dintzer, Sheala Durant, Heather Eurich, ALAN PAUL Steve Knopper, Kristine LaLonde, Michael Lustig, Alyssa WEEKEND STAFF: Fred Zinn. Lustigman, Andrew Mills, Lisa Pollak, Jim Poniewozik, Melissa Ramsdell, David Schwartz, Steve Tuch, Ryan Tutak, Rose Mary Wummel. Opinion Page Editors.............JEFFREY RUTHERFORD Display Sales Manager..........................ANNE CALE SOUTHWORTH KUBEK OPINION STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Sarah Babb, Assistant Display Sales Manager......KAREN BROWN Rosemary Chinnock, Molly Daggett, Noah Finkel, Jim DISPLAY SALES STAFF: David Bauman, Gail Belenson, Herron, Eric L. Holt, Joshua Ray Levin, I. Matthew Miller, Lauren Berman, Sherri Blansky, Pam Bullock, Jeff Chen, Steve Semenuk, Mark Weisbrot. Mark Williams. Tammy Christie, Milton Feld, Lisa George, Michelle Gill, Sports Editor.........................................JEFF RUSH Matt Lane, Heather MacLachlan, Jodi Manchik, Eddy Meng, Associate Sports Editors...................JULIE HOLLMAN Jackie Miller, Shelly Pleva, Debbie Retzky, Jim Ryan. Laura ADMSC-jF Schlanger, Michelle Slavik, Maryt Snyder, Marie Soata ADAM SCHRAGER Cassie Vogel, Bruce Weiss. PETE STEINERT NATIONALS: ValerieBreir DOUG VOLAN LAYOUT: Heather Barbar,. SPORTS STAFF: Steve Blonder, Steve Cohen, Richard TEARDOWN: Tarn Fcrton. Eisen, Lisa Gilbert, Mike Gill, Steve Ginns, Kenneth Finance Manager........................ERIC S- - - - -- - flt.RANTr7 !I Y a 4 Y L O This Spring Break, catch a Greyhound" to the beach, the mountains or your hometown. For $49.50 each way, you and your friends ,