The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition-Perspectives -Thursday, September 10, 1992- Page 5 i A 1 S I AtA New Fall Fashions Presented by Some. "Old-Time Favorites" * Ruff-Hewn s Corbin ACT UP offers 20 reasons to promote AlDS education * Pendleton * And More! r- A Trove DOME !! fVacc E* Airlir i Roil. S -Cru a- Cars el Agency With Personalized STIC & INTERNATIONAL TRi otion m Business lent Group ne Tickets Passes ses Tours els 609 by Pattrice Maurer Twenty percent of people with AIDS contracted HIV while in their teens. While teens are the fastest- growing group of people with HIV, high schools rarely provide com- plete AIDS prevention programs. The 1980s saw tens of thousands of gay men die of AIDS before the government did anything. Media hype about AIDS led to an increase in gaybashing; assaults against gay men and lesbians continue to top bias crime lists. Eighteen degrees of hype: for years, media homophobia and racism combined to demonize gay men with AIDS while keeping straight people of color with AIDS invisible. The results? Many pre- ventable deaths, many wasted years of misplaced research, increased risk for everyone. AIDS activists have tried 17 dif- ferent tactics to get the University to attend to problems at the University Medical Center. Problems include inconsistent treatment for AIDS patients, sub- standard AIDS education for staff, extreme homophobia among staff, and the refusal to allow clinical AIDS research at the hospital. These failures are well documented but no action has been taken to correct them. Sixteen groups who are poorly served by current AIDS policies: the homeless, people living in poverty, prisoners, injection drug users (IDUs), partners of IDUs, See ACT UP, Page 6 Friendly Service, AVEL ieventh Avenue t E. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR LADIES' APPAREL 306 S. State Street IL Ann Arbor, Mt 48104 Phone (313) 662-3340 WE DO ALL FR FOR U 1"-UC* -I~ mm ----I Home of Ann Arbor's Best CD Deal I diSCOUNI9 Buy More! I rECOrds A Save More! Ir 4$. 1 + 0= $1 OFF EACH Present this coupon to receiveI I $2 off any regularly priced 1 CD or tape. Not valid with $20FF AC Buy More! Save More! offer. 1 10+ 0 - or more = $3 OFF EACH 1 300 S. State (State & Liberty) " Ann Arbor * 665.3679 I _____ Members of the AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power distribute condoms and pamphlets on safer sex in an Ann Arbor park. a ----- iadsenreaawwn smr I Close to the $ action Ashley's is right in the middle of it all - concerts at Hill, films, shopping, everything the State Street entertainment area has to offer. Drop in for dinner before - we've got great food (one of the best burgers around, and all kinds of specials). And we're open late, too - drop in after when the hour's late but the evening's still young. And how about lunch? 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MI 48104 I" r , ,. i A Uniqu Are you lookir contempor or ju If so,i Made In A (Street L 769-4 ie Shopping Atmosphere! rg for alternative cards, unusual gift items, ary accents for your dorm or apartment ist something new and different? visit the stores at 222 State Plaza! kmerica Surroundings evel) -and- (Lower Level) 209 769-4208 gold bond cleaners Quality Dry Cleaning ; n a s; g . a Students shouldget involved in '92 presdnilcampaign by Emily Fries I worked at a camp this summer. Not a traditional go-hiking-and-make- a-set-of-macrame-dishes camp, this was a camp for kids who are on the de- bating teams at their high schools. Geek camp. Bright kids from all over the country come to the University for three weeks to learn how to debate and to use the University's huge library. One day, while discussing what arguments they wanted to work on with my group of kids, I decided to take an informal poll. I asked them to write down who they would vote for for President. Remember, kids at debate camp tend to be a little smarter and slightly better informed than normal high school kids. They have to read the news- paper and be vaguely aware of the issues of the day in order to compete effectively. I was shocked by their responses. Ten said they would vote for Bush. One said Clinton. Seven said Perot. Well, those seven didn't really write down Perot. One wrote Pierrot. One wrote Perrow. Parow. Perro. And so on. Not one of them spelled his name correctly. This bothered me enough that I brought it up at the faculty meeting that night. We talked about how the kids have become much more conservative. We talked about how although they all think recycling paper is important, they also seem to be less informed than the camp kids used to be. The only explanation we could come up with as to why none of them could spell Ross Perot's name was that none of them had ever read his name. They'd probably all heard about him on the evening news, or from friends at school, or from older members of their families. They'd never read his name. Scary. When I took a similar poll of my group in 1988, the majority of the campers expressed a preference for Dukakis. Many of them said that the reason they favored Dukakis wasn't so much because he was a great guy with an awe-inspiring vision, but rather that the whole Iran-Contra-Ollie- North fiasco left them untrustworthy of anyone having anything to do with the Reagan administration. They'd made an informed choice. The kids this year were so different. One of them didn't even know how to find a book in the library. That wouldn't be so weird if not for the fact that kids who debate tend to spend all of their free hours in the library. None of them could give a reason for voting for Perot beyond "he just seems better." So, as you come to this great institution of higher learning, think about what's going on in the world and what you can do to change the things you don't like. Marnv rof n uwil he 'vting in vouir first electinsQever- Get informed and Shirt Service 332 Maynard St. low I