Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Friday, October 16, 1992 VACATION; TIME "SPRING BREAK SPECIAL" Two R.T. airfares to Fla. plus a One Day Cruise to the Bahamas $150.00 'seven Nights Lodging at any major city in Fla. $770.00 Processing Fee $ 25.00 Total Cost $945.00 Cost Per Person based on Double Occ.... $472.50 To receive this EXCITING VACATION ACT NOW and send $150.00 for your Reservation Request Form. Make check or money order payable to: Vacation Time, 2753 Auburn Rd. Rochester Hills, MI 48309 313-435-5720 X0n RESTAURANT - BAR & GATHERING PLACE OPENING SOON INj TAKE IT TO THE MAX! MAXIMUM OPPORTUNITY AWAITS YOU AT OUR NEW RESTAURANT! Our Managers are professionals at making sure... The Atmosphere is always fun, The Food is always fresh, The Service is always good, The Schedule is always set and The Training is designed to let you shine! p It you are an energetic, enthusiastic team player looking for a fun, fast-paced environment then come join our OPENING TEAM! The following positions are currently availible: - Hosts/ Hostesses " Fry Cooks STALKING Continued from page 1 gitimate purpose, such as investiga- tion by a licensed private detective. The proposed law would also al- low victims to seek compensation from their stalker. Under current Michigan law, stalking is not defined as a crime, and victims can take no legal action against their assailants. "I think (the bills) are an impor- tant piece of legislation," said Debi Cain, director of the U-M's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center. "It's an important tool that allows women some protection under the law that they previously didn't have," she added. Dave Cahill, legal counsel to the House Judiciary Committee, said he expects the bills to reach Gov. John Engler before December. "The administration supports this package, and I'm confident that the governor will sign it," Cahill said. If passed before December, the law would take effect April 1,1993. Several U-M students said they would be pleased if the bills pass. "I think that with a specific def- inition of stalking that (the law) is a good idea," said LSA junior Mau- reen Brown. "It gives some power to the victim." LSA junior Zachary Kushner ex- pressed concerns about the bills. "It's important to protect the victims, but it's easy for both sides to get carried away. It's a very fine line." "The last thing that we need is a law that people can interpret differ- ent ways, or use to their own advan- tage," Kushner added. The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee has examined the issue of ;stalking and is considering proposing a model legislation that states could follow. IIE MICIIIGAN DAILY GET' T ELI FACTS G E' T'111E DAILY Call GFl 'IIE FACTS 764-0552 GT1' THlE DAILY for GF I''lIIE FACTS more GE'I"IlE DAILY GE 'l' IE FACTS GET TIlHE DAILY N EWS eSPO RTS * ARTS OPINION & PHOTO Religious services CAMPUS CHAPEL (Christian Reformed campus ministry) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421/662-2402 (one block south of CCRB) EXPLORE and ENJOY your FAITH SUNDA 10 a.m.-Morning Worship 6 p.m.- Evening Prayers WEDNESD~AY 9-10 p.m.-R.O.C.K. Student Gathering. Join us for fun, food, provocative discussion Rev. Don Postema CANTERBURY HOUSE (The Episcopal Church at the U of M) At St. Andrew's Church 306 N. Division SUNDAY: 5:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist 6:00 p.m. Dinner The Rev'd Virginia Peacock, Chaplain Offices: 411 E. Washington Street Telephone: 665-0606 EVANGEL TEMPLE ASSEMBLY OF GOD 2455 Washtenaw (at Stadium) Van rides from campus, info: 7694157 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH and AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER Huron Street (between State & Division) SUNDAYS: Worship- 9:55 a.m. Adult Church School-11:20a.m. WEDNESDAYS: Student Fellowship Supper and Discussion-5:30 p.m. For information, call 663-9376 George B. Lambrides & Ann Smiley-Oyen FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Corner of State and William SUNDAY: Communion-Douglas Chapel, 10 a.m. Worship Service-Sanctuary, 10:30 a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. (Between Hill & South University) Worship-9:30 & 11 a.m. Campus Faith Exploration Discussion Bagels & Coffee Served-9:30 am. Undergraduate Supper-5:30 p.m. THURSDAYS: Campus Worship & Dinner-5:30 p.m. For information, call 6624466 Amy Morrison, Campus Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA 801 South Forest (at Hill Street), 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship-10 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Bible Study-6 p.m. Evening Prayer-7 p.m. AIDS Continued from page 1 of females and 55 percent of males used condoms during their first ex- perience of sexual intercourse. Female adolescents are in partic- ular danger. Women are rapidly closing in on the gender gap i. AIDS cases and are projected to constitute the majority of victims by the year 2000. This trend trickles down to female adolescents, who comprised 17 percent of cases in 1987 and 39 percent in 1991. Students said the role the univer- sity should play in controlling these escalating numbers is unclear. Holladay said the university provides a good service by giving students general AIDS information in their first-year packets. Yet some students feel the HIV virus should be discussed in intro- ductory biology classes. "Slip it in there somehow so ev- eryone will find out," Flores said. "It's biology. Why not? It's some- thing we all use instead of how bees reproduce." The HIV virus is not introduced in Biology 152, which is taken by concentrators and pre-medicine stu- dents. But Associate Chair of Curriculum Steve Easter said topics such as the immune system may be introduced in the revamped Biology 154 curriculum, set to begin next semester. "The AIDS disease and the whole constellation of issues around AIDS is medicine rather than biol- ogy," Easter said. Generally, preven- tative features of medicine tend to be localized in Public Health." However, Easter noted that spe- cialty courses such as the Biology of Cancer are taught if a faculty mem- ber takes an interest in formulating and teaching the course. "Using that as a sort of precursor, it would be a plausible thing for this department to offer the Biology of AIDS," he said. "Courses that go beyond that canonical set tend to be initiated by individual instructors. If someone were to offer a Biology of AIDS course, I'd say come up with a syllabus and that would be that." Yeung indicated that the HIV virus and AIDS are discussed in sci- ence classes such as microbiology and virology because the disease has been researched so heavily recently. "It's a classic case of virus," she said. "If they're going to bring in PROPOSAL Continued from page 1 He criticized the fact that the 20 percent cut would be applied to rates in effect on Nov. 1, which do not take effect until April 1993. He said there is no criteria to prevent insur- ance companies from raising rates every six months after the proposal becomes law. The rollback is not guaranteed, but is dependent on the coverage motorists choose to buy, their own driving record, and the level of risk where they live. Critics argue that the plan would leave severely injured motorists with medical bills they can't pay. Michigan Deserves Better - a coalition including Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), the Michigan Head Injury Alliance, the Paralyzed Veterans of America, and Michigan Spinal Cord Injury Association - launched a crusade against the proposal early this month. They said the elimination of un- limited medical coverage is risky for the consumer because most catas- trophic accidents will easily exceed $250,000. "MADD is alarmed by the devas- tating impact Proposal D could have on injured victims of drunk driving crashes and their families," said Bethany Goodman, executive direc- tor of MADD Michigan. "Proposal D is a threat to every motorist in Michigan." But State Insurance Commissioner David Dykhouse said no state has required unlimited medical coverage, and New Jersey is the only other state that has a $250,000 minimum required coverage. Under the proposal, which is five pages long with 13 sections, auto in- surers would not have to pay bene- fits to injured motorists that are also available under other health policies - even if the motorist has paid a premium to the auto insurer for that coverage. Opponents said this would mean higher health-benefit costs for em- ployers, or a shift of the financial burden onto the driver with no health insurance Proposal D also includes a device to cut down on nuisance suits by set- ting new standards for an injured person to sue in auto accident law- suits. Plaintiffs would have to show an "objective manifestation" of a se- rious injury. In addition, the proposal would allow consumers to waive residual- liability insurance, which insures personal assets in the event of acci- dent-related lawsuits. It would also place cost limits on fees hospitals could charge auto in- surance companies for treating patients. AAA Michigan praised the MCCA rate structure and said it will build support for the proposal. "It verifies what we've been say- ing all along," said AAA Michigan- Government Relations Director Bill. Cillufo. But Stoddard said Lansing politi- cians are cynical of the numbers, saying the association is controlled by the auto insurance industry. He questioned the timing of the MCCA announcement, less than" four weeks before the election. He0 said the legislature requested the numbers a few months ago, but MCCA said they were unavailable. + According to a poll of Michigan. voters early this month, 43 percent said they favored the proposal and 42 percent opposed it. other viruses, they should bring in AIDS. It's something people can re- late to." Conscious of the possible con- troversy that could arise from class discussions on AIDS, she adds, "AIDS is not a political issue in it- self. It's what people make it. AIDS is a virus. It's not politically affiliated." There is a stigma attached to AIDS, Yeung asserts. "It's like there's judgment brought down on you," she said. This fear of judgment extends to taking a test for the HIV virus. As the numbers of students seeking testing and counseling have sky- rocketed since Magic Johnson's an- nouncement last year that he was HIV-positive, so has an-accompany- ing nervous anxiety. LSA first-year student Elizabeth Goldstein said she is not nervous to take an AIDS test since she feels it is extremely important. "I think it's important to have one. I plan to," she said. "There's pretty much no chance I have it. It's something that's important to me - just making sure." " Lunch Server " Bussers " Dishwashers " Grill Cooks " Pantry Cooks " Broiler/ Saute Cooks Apply in person at the restaurant: Monday-Friday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. -Noon Max and Erma's - The Concord Center 445 E. Eisenhower Blvd. Below the Olive Garden ... Tue. Oct. 2 r "Wed. Oct. *Thu. Oct. 2 4 Thu.-Sun. Oct. 22-25 The University of Michigan School of Music 0 University Symphony and Philharmonla Orchestras Gustav Meier, Donald Schleicher, conductors Brahms: Symphony No. 4 Rouse: Infernal Machine Copland: Suite, Appalachian Spring' Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. 21 Northcoast Jazz Orchestra Charles Young, director Jazz classics and original works North Campus Commons, 8 p.m. 2 Dance Guest Artist Series Sharon Lowen Odissi: Classical Indian Dance Tickets: $8, $5 (students) Studio A, Dance Building, 8 p.m. Musical Theatre A Day in Hollywood/ A Night in the Ukraine Tim Millet, director Tickets: $14, $10, $6 (students) Mendelssohn Theatre Thu.-Sat. 8 p.m.; Sun 2 p.m. Theatre and Drama The Birthday Party by Harold Pinter Vladimir Mirzoev, director Tickets: $10, $6 (students) Trueblood Theatre Thu.-Sat. 8Tp.m.;Sun. 2 p.m. 4 Contemporary Directions Ensemble H. Robert Reynolds, director Hartke: Oh Them Rats is Mean in My Kitchen Ruders: Break Dance Rihm: Chiffre No. 1 Bolcom: 12 Etudes for Piano DEBATE Continued from page 1 a swipe at Clinton's proposed tax hike, and to ask the voters to decide who has the "perseverance, the char- acter, the integrity, the maturity" to handle a crisis in the Oval Office. Perot stuck to his outsider's ap- peal, saying that if the American people want to solve their problems "and not talk about it, I'm the one person they ought to consider." Clinton closed by speaking to the voters in the audience rather than looking into the camera. He criti- cized the Republicans' "trickle down economics" one final time, then said, "We've got to grow the economy by putting people first, real people like you. " ANN AROR I 2 The three men then shook hands and moved into the audience to greet those who had been their questioners. Early on, the candidates were asked to give their remedies for the huge federal deficit, and Perot said scathingly that neither Republicans nor Democrats were willing to take blame for the nation's huge debt. The majority of students inter- viewed said they thought Clinton came out ahead after last night's debate. "I think Clinton is the clear and big winner. He knows everything about what's being asked about him," said LSA sophomore Paul Ross. "Bush was looking to hit a home run tonight to boost his standings in the polls. It looks like he is not doing it. I don't think it's going to affect his standing," said Brad Books, an LSA sophomore. Some students said Perot was gaining ground on the two main- stream-party candidates. "I think Perot is doing well. He is cutting right to the point with his comments," said LSA first-year stu- dent Oliver Wreford. "Bush continues to avoid the questions and has been on the attack since the beginning of the debate. Clinton appears relaxed. Perot could be a great economic adviser but on other issues he seems almost igno- rant," said LSA first-year student Patrick Javid. - Daily Staff Reporter Johnny Su contributed to this report. 5TH AVE. ATIBERTY 761.9700 L DIM ^Vt. AI UlDrMIT $ ..25(ARG DAILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM (BRAIN TUES. RETURNS IN SEPT.) STUDENT WITH I.D. $3.50 Fri: 4:50, 7:10, 111 Of PIRhlOIIIME 9:20 Sat Sun: A ri. B,, y Eni ncao usn 12:40,2:45, E o..ftrr, -.."-- 4:50, 7:10, 9:20 CONSENTING Kevin A D U L T SKne -Fri: 5:00,7:25,9:40 Sat Sun: 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:25, 9:40 mU---m--m -m mm Present This Coupon When Purchasing A Large Popcorn & Receive One EXPIRES 10-31-92 COPE ES 4 VVh REG. COPIES 20# White, 8.5x11 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan.Subscriptions for falVwinter terms, starting in September via U.S. mail are $155. Fall term only is $85. Winter term (January through April) is $90. On-campus subscriptions for falVwnter are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Opinion 747-2814; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. EDTORIAL STAFF Matthew D. Rennie, Editor in Chief NEWS Henry Goldblatt, Managing Editor EDITORS: Andrew Levy, Melissa Peerless, David Rheingcld, Behany Robertson STAFF: Adam Anger, Jonathan Berndt, Hope Calali, Angela Dansby. Lauren Darner, Erin Einhom, Nate Hurley, Robin Utwin, Shelley Morrison, Mona Oureehi, Karen Sabgir. Abby Schweitzer, Gwen Shaffer. Purvi Shah, Jennifer Silverberg, Karen Talaski, Andrew Taylor, Jennifer Tianen. Christine Young. GRAPHICS STAFF: David Acton, Jonathan Bemdt, Johnny Su OPINION Yael Citro, Geoffrey Earle, Amitava Mazumdar, Editors STAFF: Erik Barmack, Jonathan Chait (Associate Editor). Rin Choi, David Leilner, Jason Uichstein, Katherine Metres. Dave Rowe, David Shepardson (Editorial Assistant), Lindsay Sobel, Jordan Stancil, Brian Vikstrom. SPORTS John Niyo, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jeni Durst, Josh Dubow, Ry'an Herrgton, Albert Lin, STAFF: Tom ausano, Jesse Brouhard, Ken Davidof, Andy DeKorte, Brett Forrest, Jim Foes, Mike Hill, Brett Johnonb Dan Unna, Sharon Lundy, Adam Miller, Rich Mitvalsky. Mike Rancilio, Tim Rardin, Jaeson Rosenleld, Chad Saran, Tim Spolar, Andy Soabile. Ken Sugiura. ARTS Alan J. Hogg, Jr., Michael John Wilson, Editqrs EDITORS: Caa A. Bacon (Theater). Jessie Hlladay (Weekend etc.), Aaron Hamburger (Film), Nima Hoda..(Music), Roger Haim (Fine Arts), Christine Slovey (Books). STAFF: Megan Abbott, Melissa Rose Bemardo, Jon Altshul, Greg Baise, Mark Sinek, Adrienne Burhana, Andrew Cahn, Jason Carroll, Patrick Kim, Alison Levy, Darcy Lockman, Will Matthews, John Morgan, Jeff Rosenberg, John R. Rybock, Liz Shaw, Dave Skelly, Scott Sterling. Michael Thompson, Michelle Wager, Sarah Weidman. Kirk Wetters, Josh Worth, Kim Yaged. PHOTO Kristoffer Gillette, Editor STAFF: Erik Angermeier, Michelle Guy, Douglas Kanter, Heather Lowman, Sharon Musher, Evan Petrie, Molly Stevens. Sat. Oct. 2 BUSINESS ST Amy Milner N1i DISPLAY SALES Amy Fant, Manager ASSISTANT MANAGER: Greg An6l.a STAFF: Michael Barry, Jennifer Bayson, Yasmin Choudhry, Molina Das, Jason Gabel, Gwen Gorllnlde (Graphic Arlis, Renee Mudde, r !