I Page 2-The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 1, 1989 Diag rally will call attention to AIDS by Josephine Ballenger Today marks the celebration of World AIDS Day. Under the slogan, "Our Lives, Our World, Let's Take Care of Each Other" 166 countries across the globe will honor the event with rallies and. Locally, a rally will be held at noon on the diag featuring: an AIDS patient speaking about the disease, call-and-response songs, and Elise Bryant, art director for Common Ground Theatre reciting poems writ- ten by AIDS victims. In addition, over 50 students will b6 handing out tags to everyone who stops by. { The most important thing about the day's activities is to "promote awareness, to let people know it's a world-wide problem," said Natasha Raymond, president of U-M Friends of Common Ground Theatre. Raymond said the day's long- term goals are to promote safe sex, to educate preventative measures against AIDS, to nurture greater car- ing and respect of AIDS victims, and to encourage financial support for AIDS victims. AIDS victims need money be- cause they are usually cut off by in- surance companies and generally have little or no income, Raymond said. She said on-campus groups such as fraternities and sororities could sponsor fundraising projects like food drives and bucket drives. "It just takes a little bit of caring," she added. The focus this year is on educat- ing youth, because no one is im- mune to AIDS, Raymond said. Even university students are susceptible - and 'it's getting worse; "Students are a high risk group without even knowing it," she said. "Recent data suggests the rate of newly infected persons is increasing among young persons," said Polly Paulson, health promotion and community relations at University Health Service. "This means (young people in- fected with AIDS) haven't been able to be educated. They have been in- fected within the last 2-3 years." Paulson said, "In Washtenaw County, there have been about 50 full-blown cases (of AIDS) since 1981." The event is sponsored by Michigan Cares About AIDS, UM Friends of Common Ground Theatre, and University Health Service. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Blanchard urges Legislature not to focus on abortion bills LANSING - The Legislature will be showing a warped sense of pri- orities if it spends too much more time on a controversial abortion bill, while other measures go begging, Gov. James Blanchard said yesterday. "It would show a gross situation of warped priorities to do that. I think abortion will always be an issue, and that should not be allowed to divert the Legislature from a lot of other meaningful items they've worked on," he said. A bill scheduled for a vote next Monday in a House committee would require unmarried girls under the age of 18 to get parental consent before they could get an abortion. Blanchard is expected to veto the bill. Blanchard said he hopes before the Legislature wraps up the fall ses- sion on Dec. 13 that it will pass and send to him a number of bills where agreements already have been reached. Legislature considers auto insurance rate reductions LANSING - Michigan motorists would get auto insurance rate cuts of 20 percent or 25 percent under a pair of competing proposals introduced yesterday in the Legislature and criticized by the industry. The plan sponsored by Rep. John Maynard (D-St. Clair Shores) would force insurance companies to cut their rates by 20 percent. The other would cut rates by 25 percent, but make up for that by making cost-cut- ting changes in the state's no-fault auto insurance system. Among those changes would be limiting lawsuits by accident victims and setting maximum fees for health benefits. Town celebrates and worries over arrival of mobile missiles Mapping George A National Park Service employee places a paper target on the nose of George Washington as other targets dot the face of the first president at Mount Rushmore as mapping of cracks in the national memorial began. Photo's future Big Three may soon collaborate developing fast DETROIT (AP) - The federal government has cleared the way for General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Corp. to form a joint manufacturing project, which analysts said yester- day could enhance growing coopera- tion between the nation's Big Three outomakers. Competition from abroad and lumping earnings may push GM, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler into closer collaboration on a variety of manufacturing projects, the analysts said. The project would be the first manufacturing collaboration between any two of the Big Three and would join Chrysler's New Process Gear plant in Syracuse, N.Y., and GM's Hydra-matic factory in Muncie, Ind. On Nov.14, after the Federal Trade Commission consulted with the Justice Department's antitrust division, the waiting period ended with the project's clearance. "It's a mockery of the antitrust laws," consumer advocate Ralph Futon Frames Custom Made-convertible Delivered to your room Only $75.00 all sizes Call 668-7255 giold bond cleaners Quality Dry Cleaning and Shirt Service 332 Maynard St. acrossfrom Nickels Arcade 668-6335 Nader said yesterday. "The issue is whether we abandon our antitrust laws if it's between U.S. companies. "Fifteen years ago, this wouldn't even be proposed, it would have been laughed out of existence." In the last 15 years the Big Three - GM in particular - have seen their dominance of the U.S. auto market eroded by Japan-based com- panies first exporting cars and later setting up manufacturing plants in the United States. During that time, each of the Big Three set up joint ventures with foreign automakers on a variety of projects. Currently, there are 10 major U.S. and Japanese companies mak- ing cars and trucks on U.S. soil. Those other than the Big Three are called "transplants." "I think it is a symptom of the tough competitive situation in the U.S. auto industry where the Big Three feel themselves threatened by imports and transplants," said inde- pendent auto analyst David Healy of New York. "Since all of the cars produced here generally use pretty similar components, it doesn't make a lot of sense to have independent develop- ment of fairly routine parts like transmissions and axles and so forth," he added. Healy and other analysts agreed that competition in the auto industry will push the Big Three into more joint manufacturing projects. But they predicted the cooperation would stop far short of sharing product se- crets or actually making an entire car or truck. GLAND PROBLEMS? We're here to help. It's a new Write: Help te advice c/o Michigan Daily column in 420 Maynard the Daily. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 THE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES PARADE Dec 29-Jan 5 Escorted Land Tour *Universal Studios *NBC Studios *San Diego Zoo *Tijuana, Mexico "Hollywood Queen Mary. ..*MORE *Grandstand Seat *Crystal Cathedral Hotel, Breakfasts, 6-Dinners, $799Air NATIONAL TRAVEL VACATIONS 1-800-525-5009 or any travel agent ROSE BOWL AIR ONLY from $358 COMPLETE PACKAGES by Ruth Littmann Daily Staff Writer The University's two-day birth- day party for photography was cele- brated with a flash yesterday, as writer, critic, and photographer A.D. Coleman looked to a future where today's two-dimensional photos will seem antiquated. Coleman said just as color pho- tography has become more popular than black and white, three-dimen- sional photography will someday be the rage. His speech at the Chrysler Audi- torium, titled "Photography and Cul- ture," was the first event of a two- day symposium celebrating the 150th year since photography was formally introduced. Coleman discussed photographic processes such as electronic imag- ing, but said that new technology presents problems as well as oppor- tunities. He explained that the latest computer techniques allow original camera images to be manipulated. "The existence of such technol- ogy within a culture that has been convinced for almost 150 years of the scientific accuracy of photo- graphic documents should be cause for alarm," he warned. "The visual technology for popu- lation surveillance and for the ma- nipulation of fact and history smacks of the totalitarian features projected in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, (George) Orwell's 1984, and (Ray) Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, and are all in existence at this mo- ment." Coleman emphatically urged edu- cators to recognize the importance and potential dangers of visual im- agery in our current culture. Univer- sities, he said, should not only re- quire students to take composition courses which stress verbal commu- nication, but should also require stu- dents to take a basic photography course which would stress visual communication. The photography symposium will continue today in room 2104 of the Art and Architecture Building. The events, which begin at 9:30 a.m., include forums featuring pho- tographer/artists Jules Allen and Dorit Cypis. POT * Continued from Page 1 "The strategy was that the stu- dents would be out of town. Stu- dents are purposely being kept out of the process," he said. But Jernigan said this is not true. He said the agenda item would prob- ably be tabled when it is brought be- fore the council so that as many viewpoints as possible can be heard before a vote is made. "(NORML members) are just talking to hear themselves talk," Jernigan said. NORML members said last night that the April 1 annual Hash Bash will again be held this year. The group has obtained a legal permit to hold an event on the Diag. The emphasis of this year's Hash Bash will be saving the five dollar pot law; in the past, the bashes were only intended as a show of civil dis- obedience. NORML members said they want to show the city their group was not responsible for the vandalism which followed last year's Hash Bash. Last year's event coincided with the Michigan basketball team's ap- pearance in the NCAA's Final Four. The night of April 1, hundreds of fans stormed the South University area to celebrate the team's semi-fi- nal victory over Illinois. OSCODA, Mich. - Cheers, fears and questions followed the Pen- tagon's decision that Wurtsmith Air Force Base will house nuclear mis- siles made to be launched from the nation's railroads. Wurtsmith, a 24-hour alert Strategic Air Command base near Oscoda on northern Michigan's Lake Huron shore, on Wednesday was named as one of several installations named to receive the rail-based MX missile. Construction of a rail garrison to house the missiles during times of peace is expected to pump $100 million into the northern Michigan econ- omy and create a peak of 919 temporary jobs. During a crisis, the missiles would be loaded onto railroad cars and sent onto the Detroit and Mackinac railroad to make them a mobile and less vulnerable target. Riegle prepares his defense WASHINGTON, D.C. - Sen. Donald Riegle hired a lawyer who once represented Oliver North in the Iran-contra affair to represent him in the probe of his involvement with the nation's biggest savings and loan failure. Riegle, chair of the Senate Banking committee, and four other senators involved in the matter, intervened with federal regulators on behalf of the failed California thrift in 1987 - two years before it was seized by the government. Lincoln's owner, Charles Keating, Jr., and his associates made large campaign contributions to all five senators. Riegle received $78,250 but returned it in 1988. Riegle's Michigan colleague, Sen. Carl Levin, said yesterday he would" withhold his judgement of Riegle's conduct in the Lincoln Savings & Loan Association matter until the Senate ethics committee issues a re- port. EXTRAS Daily feels harsh realities of MSA's anti-glasnostic ways While millions of Eastern Europeans flood the streets calling for fair and open elections, tonight, complacent Americans will sleep easy,. oblivious to the dark threat brewing in Ann Arbor, a town comfortably nestled the backyard of democracy. In the Soviet Union, the press is experiencing unheard-of new freedoms, challenging the government and probing the electoral process. In Ann Arbor, Michigan, back in the USA, humble and meek Daily staffers dropping by MSA's election headquarters to ask about the availability of results were beaten like wet dogs, oppressed by the arm of the totalitarian Aaron Williams regime, crushed under the heel of clandestine fascism which has enshrouded the traditional stronghold of campus democracy. Behind the barbed wire and "No Trespassing!" signs posted outside MSA's Michigan Union garrison, a most disturbing fungus begins to grow, a blackened wart, a vile malignant tumor. What starts with pushes in the chest and feet bruised by slamming doors, will surely bring us towards an Orwellian 1984esque society, towards a closed and bitter Amerika, where freedom and justice are vague memories and everyone wears the bicycle gloves of oppression. -Names withheld for fear of further injustices 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: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 in-town and $39 out-of-town, for fall only $18.00 in-town and $22.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379, Sports 747-3336, Cir- culation 764-0558, Classified advertising 764-0557, Display advertising 764-0554, Billing 764-0550 EIFrORIAL STAFF: 40 PHILIPPINES Continued from page 1 chief of staff, acknowledged that rebels had seized Villamor Air Base, headquarters of the Philippine air force; the government broadcast cen- ter; a private television station; and the Ninoy Aquino International Air- port. In Washington, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said U.S. officials had only sketchy in- formation and "we're watching it closely. .. .We're very concerned about it and we continue to support the democratically elected govern- ment of Mrs. Aquino." There was no indication who was leading the mutiny, and rebel sol- diers would not say. They were be- lieved loyal to renegade Lt. Col. Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan, who led an August 1987 coup attempt in which at least 53 people were killed. Soon after dawn, pro-government troops opened fire with recoilless ri- fles on rebels near the government broadcast center and rebels returned the fire, blocking the road with trucks. No casualty reports were available. 6 ECONO-CA R Editor in Chief Adam Schrager Sports Editor Mike Gil Managing Editor Steve Knpper Associate Sports Editors Adam Benson, Steve Blonder, News Editors Miguel Cruz, Richard Eisen, Lory Knapp, Alex Gordon, David Schwartz Taylor Linodn Opinion Page Editors Elzabeth Esch, Amy Hamon Arts Editors Andrea Gadd, Ayssa Katz Associate Opinion Editors Phiip Cohen, Camille Colatosi Rim Tony Siber Sharon Holand Music Nabeel Zuberi Letters Editr David Levin Books Mark Swartz Weekend Editors Alyssa Lusdigman, Theatre Jay Pekala :.ndrew Mils Photo Editor David Lubiner Weekend Staff Jm Poniewozik Graphics Coordinator Kevin Woodson News: Karen Akedof, Joanna Broder, Jason Carter, Diane Cook, Laura Counts, Marion Davis, Noah Finkel, Tara Gruzen, Jennifer Hr, Ian Hoffman, Britt Isaly, Terri Jackson, Mark Katz, Christine Kloostra, Kristne LaLonde, Jennifer Miller, Josh M snick, Dan Poux, Amy Quick, Gil Renberg, Taraneh Shal, Mike Sobel, Vera Songwe, Jessica Strick, Noele Vance, Ken Walker, Donna Woodwel. Opinion: Jonathan Fink, Christina Fong, Deyar Jamil, Fran Obeid, Liz Paige, Henry Park, Greg Rowe, Kathryn Savoie, Kim Springer, Rashid Taher, Luis Vasquez, DimaZalatimo. Sports: Jamie Burgess, Steve Cohen, Theodore Cox, Jeni Durst, Scott Erskine, Andy Gottesman, Phil Green, Aaron Hinkin, David Hynan, Bethany Kipec, Eric Lemont, John Niyo, Srah Osburn, Matt Rennie, Jonathan Samnick, David Scheeter, Ryan Schreiber, Jeff Sheran, Peter Zelien, Dan Zoch. Arts: Greg Baise, Sherril L Bennett; Jen Bilk, Mark Bineli, Kenneth Chow, Sheala Durant, Brent Edwards, Mke Fischer, Forrest Green, Brian Jarvinen, Mike Kunlavsky, Ami Mehta, Mike Molitor, Carolyn Por, Krisin Palm, Annette Petrusso, Jay Pink, Gregorl Roadh, Cindy Rosenthal, Peter Shapi o, Mark Webster. Photo: Jennifer Duner, Amy Feldman, Julie Holm an, Jose Juarez, Jonathan Lss, Josh Mootne, Samiantha Sanders, Kenneeth Smaller, Douglas Usher. OPEN 7 DAYSp 60 I l I l ...... ,.. , ...,....,. 1