Mill? ............................................................................................'......................................... Sv \ '' . ' ' * 2 A' g . . . . . Inside W i rkr Magazine Television in the 1980s Christopher Parkening Worth Winning/Shocker OPINION Women political prisoners 4 SPORTS 9 Michigan hockey loses to Bowling Green . u .3r' '? : 'FF $R ...v7,.... cr........... . ......... .....k.'z.......,.. .... . .;,;. :. Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C; No. 43 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 3, 1989 IVA.- iE t SA _ Police searCh for leads on iTres Ann Arbor Police Department officials said yesterday they have no substantial leads in their inves- tigation of last Sunday's fires, which destroyed several dumpsters, cars, and garages on a student block at the intersection of Oakland and Church Streets. Police officials suspect the fires were caused by arson. Det. Robert Levansler, who is in charge of the investigation, said there are no suspects and no leads - despite a vague eyewitness ac- count of a man with long, brown hair squirting lighter fluid onto a dumpster - for future arrests. Levansler said the eyewitness, University alumnus Jim Schecter, has returned to his New York home and is difficult to reach. LSA junior Jeff Schlussel, whose S. Forest Ave. house lost its garage and six cars to the fire, said Ann Arbor Fire Inspector Dennis Hasley told him yesterday the outside wall of the garage was lit with starter fluid and the Church St. garage fire was started first. Hasley refused comment last night. Schlussel added that the chances of finding the perpetrator are "slim, unless he starts brag- ging about it." LSA senior Howard Katz, whose Church St. garage burnt to the ground, agreed. "You can't fol- low every person with long hair in the state of Michigan," he said. .Schlussel said new cable, phone, and electricity lines have been installed to replace the old ones, which were damaged by the fire. Students by Ken Walker Daily Staff Writer More than 30 students told University offi- cials they were dissatisfied with the Univer- sity's financial aid program last night during a two-hour forum at Stockwell Residence Hall. Officials such as Assistant Vice President of Academic Affairs Robert Holmes and Direc- tor of Financial Aid Harvey Grotrian were on hand to answer questions from the students. The forum was organized by the United Coalition Against Racism. criticize UCAR member Kimberly Smith, a second- year medical student and one of the forum's or- ganizers, said the University's literature about the financial aid program is misleading. She noted that financial aid literature states that "no student leaves the University of Michigan for financial reasons." Smith c2lled this statement "a blatant lie," and said decreases in yearly financial aid pack- ages account for many students' inability to af- ford classes at the University. However, Holmes said the problems with 'U' financial aid the aid program are not completely the Univer- sity administration's fault. "Two-thirds of fi- nancial aid funds (at the University) come from the United States government," he said. "Human service programs have recently been a low priority in Washington, D.C." Holmes stressed the administration's com- mitment to a strong aid program, saying, "Over the past several years, financial aid has been the fastest-growing segment of the school budget." He demonstrated the commitment by taking down the names of students with grievances during and after the forum, and promising at- tention to those who mentioned their aid prob- lems during the discussion. Decreases in financial aid from one year to the next were a concern of many students pre- sent at the forum, who felt they had been mis- led by the University with large initial aid levels. Students also criticized the University be- cause of: See FINANCE, Page 2 $1.1 billion cut from SDI in defense bill WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional negotiators yesterday approved a $305 billion defense bill that slashes $1.1 billion from President Bush's Strategic Defense Initiative and eliminates one B-2 stealth bomber. The plan, the product of nearly eight weeks of wrangling between the House and Senate conferees, pro- vides much of Bush's request for land-based nuclear missiles and re- stores some funds for two conven- tional-arms programs' the president sought to kill. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said he was "generally pleased" with the bill because it "authorizes funds for effective modernization of our strategic forces." He expressed some disappointment, however, over the cut in the SDI request. "I would have preferred a higher level of funding for SDI," the de- fense secretary, in Australia for bi- lateral talks, said in a statement re- leased by the Pentagon. Sen. John Warner of Virginia, ranking Republican on the Armed Services Committee, said he expects the president to sign the bill once it passes the House and the Senate. "Apart from SDI, on the whole it's one which we find acceptable," Warner said of the bill. The legislation provides$3.57 billion for SDI, popularly known as Star Wars, in the fiscal year that be- gan Oct. 1 - about $200 million less than the amount spent in fiscal 1989 and the first decrease in funds since former President Reagan pro- posed the anti-missile shield six years ago. Adding $220 million for related Energy Department programs, the final total for Star Wars is $3.79 bil- lion, which falls between the $2.8 billion approved by the House and the $4.3 billion adopted by the Sen- ate. KENNETH SMOLLER/ Daily Sure Ma, we always keep it this clean First-year LSA students Phil and Dave Kahn clean their Markley hall room for parents' weekend. Patients: unsung heroes of the by Diane Cook Daily Research Reporter The days of heroes like John Wayne, Spiderman, and Wonder Woman are long gone. Yesterday's caped crusader is be- ing replaced by a troop of real-life heroes at the forefront of the battle against the modern-day villain - the AIDS virus. While doctors and re- searchers receive much of the credit for fighting the virus, people like Rick Hayner are the unsung heroes. Hayner is currently teetering be- tween AIDS Related Complex (ARC), which precedes AIDS, and AIDS. Both viruses can result from the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), for which Hayner tested posi- tive in 1986. Hayner, founder of the Friends/Huron Valley Persons with AIDS/ARC Alliance, participates in studies with experimental drugs. A home-care nurse until 1987, Hayner was forced to stop working due to excessive fatigue from infec- tions following a positive HIV test in 1986. Like many infected individ- uals, he is unable to draw much from Social Security because he hasn't been a member of the work force for very long. "It's been very difficult for me because I'm unable to work," he said. "I get very limited Social Secu- rity disability - $380 per month.". Hayner is participating in studies with the National Institutus of battle against Health that involve using the drugs With that ca zidovudine (AZT) and alpha inter- were just left feron. The studies are designed to de- "I had no ide termine how long the drugs keep pa- in two month tients healthy, and to prevent the pa- Now, pat tients from lapsing into major ill- after the tests nesses like pneumonia. the results ar Hayner said things have changed Hayner sa since his testing. for the virus "When I was first diagnosed, years, and s there was no pre-imposed test coun- should recei seling. They told you over the phone symptoms ar whether or not you were positive. AIDS ame no referrals. You t on your own," he said. a - was I going to die hs? It was scary." ients must come back for counseling whether e positive or negative. id the incubation period may be as long as 10 tressed that all people ve testing, even if no e present. See AIDS, Page 2 Bush nominates former 'U' medical intern for U.S. by Ruth Littm surgeon general ann The 1971 University Medical Center's "intern of the year" was nominated for U.S. surgeon general Wednesday by President Ge- orge Bush. Antonia Coello Novello served her resi- dency in pediatrics from 1970-73 at the Uni- versity. If confirmed by the Senate, Novello will be the first woman and Hispanic to hold the post of U.S. surgeon general. Novello's former University co-workers yesterday enthusiastically supported her nomination. "Dr. Novello is a very dynamic person," said Dr. Robert Kelch, chair of the Univer- sity's Department of Pediatrics, who worked with Novello when she was a resident. "She is immediately able to establish rapport with all people. I can think of only positive adjectives to describe her." After her residency at the University, Novello received a fellowship to study kidney disease and stayed in Ann Arbor until 1974. She served as a pediatrics fellow at Georgetown University and received her master's of public health from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1982. Novello is considered to be a national ex- pert on AIDS in children. She has served as deputy director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development since 1986. Bo fearful of Boilermakers explosive QB by Richard Eisen Daily Football Writer In the thick of the Big Ten race, the Michigan A . Wolverines are only a week away from a showdown with Illinois, the other unbeaten Big Ten team. But, there's only one thing standing in the way of that huge contest: the Purdue Boilermakers. While this team isn't The Wall of Jericho, it does represent ai obstacle for the always nervous Michigan S. coach Bo Schembechler. "Purdue's kind of an uncertainty," Schembechler said of the team he has not faced in over two years. "They're playing pretty tough. I'm a little cautious." Regardless of the butterflies in Schembechler's stomach, the Boiler-makers sport an unthreatening 0-4 Big Ten record and 1-6 overall. In addition, the Boilermakers have rushed for only 519 yards all season long. VOW "They're going to throw. They're not fundamentally a rushing team," Schembechler-understated. "Although that quarterback can run like the Dickens." SChemhtachle~r wasnot tn11inaniit P.r.iiD.'c eik h-' Bush, Republicans concede defeat on capital gains tax WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush and Cenate Dennhinnc nfferMrI vetprdnv tm (R-Kan.), told Democrats that Republicans wnnld nr tn limitmendmente to the