The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 21,1990-- Pages Census counts y MSA 1 . places i U.S.0 homeless a 'I by the Associated Press A legion of clipboard-toting counters set out yesterday for shelters, subways and steam grates in the broadest attempt ever to find out the extent of homelessness since it became a national disgrace in the 1980s. No one expects the $2.7 million, one-night U.S Census Bureau effort to yield a precise tally of Americans with no fixed address. Critics fear an undercount will discourage the government from housing and feeding the homeless. "It's akin to looking for needles in haystacks," said David Hayden, founder of the advocacy group Justice House Community in suburban Washington, D.C. "If people with clipboards can find them, so can people with 2-by-4s who want to rob them. They should spend the money on decent, affordable housing." But the Census Bureau has hired 15,000 enumerators - the federal euphemism for headcounters - to find the homeless in their untidy world of shelters, roosts and hideouts. The government wants to know their name, age, sex, race and marital status. "This may give us the first handle on the magnitude of the prob- lem but not necessarily the true size of it," said Kenneth Meyer, assistant regional census manager in New York. Estimates of the homeless population now range from 250,000 to 3 million. . The counters, many of whom are homeless and will be paid $7.50 an hour, got six hours of training before hitting the streets. In New York City alone, 2,167 sites have been tagged as places where the homeless congregate. The Michigan search centered in decaying pockets of Detroit but also included such areas as resort-rich Traverse City. "There's homeless everywhere," said regional census spokesman Jerry Blocker in Detroit. "You just have to look hard in some places." Ashley expected to find only about 80 percent of Lansing's esti- mated 1000 homeless, even less if the night was cold. Bad weather would drive them into abandoned buildings and other corners of the city census takers wound not dare penetrate. Twenty homeless applicants passed the literacy test and got se- curity clearance at one of three Detroit census offices. But when it came time to hire, the office could locate only three to tell them they had the job. If census workers could not get detailed information from they were interviewing, they were told to just take down head counts and make their own guesses as to age, sex and race, Blocker said. The count was complicated by last-minute changes. Shelters for women hiding from spouse abuse were taken off the list. Workers feared that photographers cou by Daniel Po Daily MSA Rep University e code of non-acad deputize and arm ficers have arou versy on campus Last night, th Assembly voted sues on the Apr so students cant to the assembly on these controv The referend Shall th MSA, or any ot ments approve ac of non academic procedures with the CODE draf dures to the stud Shall MS/ dent governmen University of M its own armed se It is importan to a student Rackham repr Dolgan, authorc dum, because M tive in fightingt efforts. "Although M to address these] conservative rep out the student1 the administrat Dolgan said. "If needed an oppo madness." Women's Iss sophomore Jenn Dolgan propose dum. Van Valey tance of studen sues. "4 L;.t..a . . le, u eputies F ' '90 ballot )ux ready too small number of campus orter security officers. fforts to institute a "I don't see how a campus safety emic conduct and to officer with a gun is going to pre- campus security of- vent someone from date raping me, sed student contro- or racially harassing me on the for several years. street," she said. e Michigan Student The assembly approved another to put these two is- referendum dealing with tbe il 4th and 5th ballot International Student and Minority , voice their opinions Affairs Commissions. and administration The referendum will decidel ersies. whether ISAC or MAC can select ums ask students: their own chairs. Presently, the e administration, assembly selects the chairs for all ot her student govern- the commissions. comprehensive code However, the referendum would conduct or hearing require MSA approval of the com-- out first submitting mission chair before he or she could t or hearing proce- take their seat. ent body for a vote? MAC Chair and Engineering A or the other stu- sophomore Ravi Gadhia said hem: nts approve of the wanted to students to support the ichigan establishing proposal, but would press for further curity officers? action to ensure MAC's autonomy. it to put these issues "The intent of the original pro, vote, explained posed change was to guarantee that, esentative Corey ISAC and MAC elect their own. of the code referen- chairs with the simple reasoning thaC SA has been ineffec- members of the minority commuU the administration's nity and international students are, most qualified and best able to select8 [SA reps are elected their own chairs," Gadhia said. issues directly, many He went on to say that, while the; as have been selling amended ballot question is a com-2 body by supporting promise, MAC and ISAC are not.; ive power plays," satisfied. felt the student body "After bringing it up with MAC ortunity to stop the and ISAC, it was decided that the amended proposed change would be, ues Chair and LSA supported, rather than pull it from' lifer Van Valey and the ballot," the MAC chair said. d the second referen- "However, regardless of the outcome stressed the impor- MAC will attempt to change tbre t input on these is- MSA Constitution in the manner we had originally intended next fall." AP Photo A homeless man sits huddled against the side of a building during a rain storm in New Yrk, yesterday. A legion of census -takers set out later in the day for subways and city streets to count the city's homeless. and television cameras might give 30,000 homeless people live in the away the location of women in Detroit metropolitan area. hiding, a Michigan census official Another count March 31 will said. survey YMCAs, carnivals, fair- United Community Services in grounds, racetracks and 1984 estimated between 25,000 and campgrounds. See news happen? N.Y. abortion Call the Daily at 764-0552 LTHE LIST W~hat's happening in Ann Arbor today clinics turn away AIDS victims Meetings UM Hellenic Students --- meeting at 8 p.m. Union Crowfoot Room Philosophy Club --- meeting at 7 p.m. Philosophy Commons Room, 2220 Angell Hall UM Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club --- beginners welcome 8:30- 9:30 p.m. Martial Arts Room of the CCRB UM Taekwondo Club --- beginners welcome 7-8:30 p.m. 2275 CCRB East Quad/R.C. Social Group for Lesbians, Gay Males and Bisexuals --- for students in residence halls 9-11 p.m.; call 763-4186 for more information UM Asian Student Coalition (UMASC) -- meeting and sexism workshop at 7 p.m. in the Room 2413 Mason Hall Students Fighting Anti- Semitism --- meeting at 7:30 p.m. at Hillel UM Sailing Team --- open meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Room 26 Angell Hall Latin American Solidarity Committee --- meeting and video on El Salvador at 8 p.m. in the Union; see desk for room Speakers "Arrival Agents - The Search for Selectivity" --- Gertrude B. Elion speaks at 11 a.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater "Fact and Value" --- a discussion of Leonard Peikoff's article at 8 p.m. in Room A of the Michigan League "Nancy Cruzan's Right to Die and The Supreme Court" --- Carl Cohen speaks at noon in the South Lecture Hall of Med Sci II "Making Molecules Visible or How to Get into the Guiness Book Without a Bicycle" --- Lawrence Barsell speaks at 3 p.m. in Room 1640 Chemistry Bldg. "Adaptive Ordinal Urn Models" --- Nancy Flournoy speaks at 4 p.m. in the Auditorium of the Thomas Francis Bldg. SPH II Evening with Survivors --- women surviviors will speak of their vznrienre 1mrinn the "Analytical Seminar"--- Mahvash Banisalam speaks at 4 p.m. in Room 1650 Chemistry Bldg. "The Process of Discovery in Science and Art" --- the Residential College will host a, discussion with Robert Root- Bernstein at 4 p.m. in Room 126 East Quad "Revolution in Hungary: The Grassroots Perspective" --- Eva Huseby-Darvas speaks from noon- 1, p.m. in the Lane Hall Commons Room "Latin America: What is to be Done?" --- Bruce Cameron, Leonel Gomez, Robert Kagan, and Daniel H. Levine speak at 8 p.m. in the Unioknn Kuenzel Room "Fragmentation and Redemption: The Social and Religious Context of the Christian Doctrine of Resurrection in the Early Latin West" --- Caroline Bynam speaks at 4 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre Furthermore Free tutoring - for all lower level math, science and engineering courses in UGLi 307 from 8-10 p.m. Northwalk - the north campus night-time walking service runs form 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. in Bursley 2333 or call 763-WALK Safewalk - the nighttime safety walking service runs from 8 p.m.- 1:30 a.m. in UGLi 102 or call 936-1000 ECB Peer Writing Tutors - peer writing tutors available for help on papers 7-11 p.m. in the Angell/Haven and 611 Church St. computing centers One Man Show --- Kurt Kren's film will be shown as part of the Avant-Garde Cinema Series at 7 p.m. in Angell Hall Aud C; $1 donation suggested Career Planning and Placement --- public service: professional perspectives 6:10- 7:30 p.m. Union Pendleton Room Best of the Open Stages --- as part of the 25th anniversary celebration The Ark will feature performances by a host of local amateur nerformers WASHINGTON (AP) - Women who arrange for abortions at many New York City clinics often find their appointments canceled once they reveal that they are infected with the AIDS virus, an informal survey suggests. Callers from the city's human rights commission made appoint- ments with 30 abortion clinics and physicians that advertised in the Yellow Pages. Twenty canceled the appointment after the caller said she was infected with the human immune deficiency virus, or HIV, but has no symptoms of AIDS. Katherine Franke, a commission lawyer who led the informal study, said 12 clinics said they did not have adequate infection control while others said abortion on an HIV- infected woman was too complicated a procedure for them to handle and referred the caller to a hospital. "Those were the nice responses," she said. "On the other end, we had some that just hung up or said 'We can't treat your kind.' Many were very hostile. One nurse responded, 'That's OK, we'll do an abortion for any kind of blood type."' Most women with HIV simply don't tell - "That's they way they get abortions," Franke said. But for women who do and are refused or referred to a crowded public hospital, the result may be delay in getting an abortion, which increases chances of complications. "The later the abortion, the less safe it is," she said. The chances that a woman will pass the AIDS virus to her baby are estimated at between 20 and 50 percent. Los Angeles obstetrician- gynecologist David Grimes said that, in his experience, half of HIV- infected woman opt for abortion and half give birth. While physicians outside New York said they too had heard of in- stances in which HIV-infected women have been refused treatment or referred elsewhere, many said they did not see a widespread problem. Indeed, Grimes, the chairperson of Planned Parenthood's medical advisory committee, said, "I think the community is meeting the need," but added that the situation may be different in East Coast cities, where more women have HIV. He did say he often sees patients referred by other physicians who feel inadequately prepared to treat HIV- infected women. Although women who are HIV- positive but have no symptoms of AIDS and no other diseases are generally at no greater risk than non HIV women for abortion, he said, women whose immune systems are compromised - whether by AIDS or some other disease - are more appropriately treated in a hospital. Since 1943 '' '8* DOBBS F N SUNG LASS SALE Porsche - Carrera Ray-Ban .Vuarnet-France Serengeti *"Polo 211 E. Liberty 663-2418 ServicingU ' of M 's eyewear needs I think it is vital to have a stu dent vote on any administrative ac tion that will affect them directly,' she said. Van Valey went on to point oui that according to the recently releases report from the University's Tasi Force on Safety Issues, the tw( largest crime problems on campus are acquaintance rape and racia harassment. Neither of these, she argued would be curbed by arming an al WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 A. . A '- " .- I } -t e S. * 5' 764-0553 News 763-0379 Arts 764-0562 News and Opinion 747.3334 News ; 763-0376 Sports 763-2459 News '747-3336 Sports OPEN WIDE! DENTAL HEALTH DAY at the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DENTAL SCHOOL SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1990 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. a *. a r ;9 a " free oral screening " free x-rays " open to the public " parking available at the Fletcher Street parking structure - U of M Dental School located on the corner of Fletcher and N. University,in Ann Arbor " enter at the north or south entrances, and go to the first floor reception desk U N A Cutter MILES Plasma Collection Facility PEOPLE A PEOPLE - " 40 million hospital patients rely on PLASMA industry pro- S'< ducts each year. " 20,000 hemophiliacs in the United States rely on PLASMA- produced Antihemophilic Factor concentrate daily. " 2,000 infant deaths have been prevented by the use of Rh Immune Globulin prepared from PLASMA. " 120,000 burn victims, 200,000 heart surgery patients and shock- victims rely on the use of i11 1u s- Coming Attractions: THE SPRING '90 FASHION ISUF I I