Despite having a pro-choice Congress and president, pro-choicers need to be wary of radical pro-life groups, like Operation Rescue, which try to prevent women from having legal abortions. Jon Amiel's "Sommersby" starring Richard Gere and Jodie Foster, which depicts post-Civil War Tennessee, keeps the viewer in suspense until the end. Jon Altshul reviews the film. SPORTS The Michigan women's gymnastics team lost for the first time this season Sunday at Michigan State Invitational. The Spartans edged the Wolverines, 190.05-189.46, to capture the title. Today Partly sunnyarmer High 42, Low 34 Tomorrow Rain; High 44, Low 36 V i:l 11 One hundred two years of editorial freedom ti Vol.~I I CI o 6AnAboMcia-usa, Ferury9~99 ©993Th Mchga Dil LSA to lose East by Jennifer Silverberg Daily Administration Reporter Thirty percent of LSA classes will be moved over the next four years as the University spends $27.5 million to turn most of East Engineering into faculty offices. LSA currently uses 253 class- rooms. Space in Mason Hall, C.C. Little and the Chemistry complex will be used to absorb the 77 rooms and Psychology Department offices and classrooms. The East Engineering renovations will be completed in two phases, each lasting about two years. The first 37 classrooms will be out of commission this May, when north wing renovations begin. South wing repairs will begin in the summer of 1995, when the remaining 40 class- rooms will be lost. Ctirad Uher, associate dean for LSA research and facilities, said 19,400 students -17,600 who are Engineering classrooms. currently enrolled in the school of available for student organizational provided for the $27.5 million. LSA - will be affected by the meetings. "It's been planned for a long, renovations. But Uher said most students will long time, it's just the money now There will be more 8 a.m., not notice many differences. became available," said Vice evening and Friday classes; "Potentially all (will be affected) President for Student Affairs Dormitory meal hours will be but in realistic terms, absolutely not, Maureen Hartford. extended to adjust to earlier and later because only a certain fraction of Faculty who have worked in East classes; those can fill the classes between Engineering said the repairs are North Campus bus schedules eight and nine in the morning," Uher much needed. will be altered to accommodate ex- said. "This is dirty space, unclean tended class hours; The renovations come after years space and not the right place for stu- Security will become a con- of trying to secure the necessary dents," said Bertram Herzog, adjunct cern for night classes; and, funds. A bond issue approved in professor of Electrical Engineering Less classroom space will be June 1992 by the Board of Regents See CLASS, Page 2 &' I U" *E iEUL These are some impacts of the East Engineering renovations: LSA will lose 77 classrooms in East Engineering. These will be absorbed in Mason Hall, C.C. Little and the Chemistry Complex. There will be more 8 a.m., evening and Friday classes. The new East Engineering will house psychology and math department offices and some classroom space. lost because of renovations. The newly renovated Engineering will be devoted toI East Math 'U' picks research * vice pres. . v c by, Nate Hurley Daily Administration Reporter The University may have found the new person who will be respon- sible for the more than $300 million spent on research each year. Homer Neal, a professor and chair of the Department * of Physics, will be submitted to the University Board of Regents at its next meeting to replace retiring Vice President for Neal Research William Kelly. If approved, the appointment will be effective Sept. 1. A search committee, headed by Engineering Prof. Thomas Adamson, recommended Neal to University President James Duderstadt last week. "He was the best candidate," said Walter Harrison, executive director of University relations. "He com- bines his own specific expertise as a leading researcher in the country in physics with depth and breadth of experiments with leading a research department and being a provost at another university and his broad ex- perience in Washington on science." Neal left the State University of New York-Stony Brook in 1987 to join the University. He chaired the National Science Board Committee on Undergraduate Science Educa- tion, the National Science Foun- dation Physics Advisory Committee and the national Academy of Sci- ences' Committee on Career Choices of Talented Students. Neal received his Ph.D. in physics from the University in 1966. W. Quad sign 'offensive' to female students by David M. Powers and Karen Talaski Daily Staff Reporters The U. S. Constitution's provi- sion to protect free speech came into play recently when a University student asked two West Quad residents to remove an "offensive" street sign from their window. Mechele de Avila, a first-year School of Social Work graduate student, said she thinks the sign - which reads "Pussie Rd." - is derogatory toward women and should be taken down. "I have to walk past the sign ev- ery day ... and I'm really of- fended," de Avila said. "The sign says women are second-class citizens." de Avila started a campus-wide petition yesterday to protest the sign. The petition asks for the sign's removal because it con- tributes "to a hostile and intimidating environment (for women)." - The sign is located in a second- See SIGN, Page 2 Located in a West Quad window, the "Pussie Rd." sign has offended many University students. Experts: AIDS becomes more of threat to women Symptoms, tmnsmission to children, stigmazation ofpmstiutes concern women by Angela Dansby The number of reported AIDS cases in adolescent women ages 13- 19 in the United States increased 67 percent between December 1989 and December 1990 - more than twice the increase among adolescent men of the same age for the same time period. Robert Fekety, head of the Infectious Disease Clinic at the University Hospital said AIDS is growing as a leading cause of death for women in the United States. "The transmission from a man to a woman by heterosexual activity is easier than transmission from a woman to a man," he said. There are about 26,000 cases of women with AIDS today. Paula Schuman of the Department of Infectious Diseases at Wayne State University School of Medicine said this number probably reflects only Living with Second o our articles 10 percent of HIV-infected women. "Infection among women has- been on the rise in the last ten years but no one knew about it," Schuman said. She said most experts believe symptoms of HIV infection are similar for men and women, adding that despite recent media attention, vaginal yeast infections are not necessarily a symptom of HIV. "Vaginal yeast infections are no reason for women to think that they need a HIV antibody test. They are common in all healthy women. Eighty percent of most women in the U.S. have had a yeast infection," Schuman added. But she said oral yeast infection is a clear indicator of HIV infection. Oral yeast infections occur in both men and women, though there is some evidence that women are slightly more prone to them than men. "Cervical malignancies are the most important thing concerning women - they are much more common in women who are HIV infected," she said. "The most important thing for women with HIV is to have first rate primary gynecological care," Schuman added. Another important issue concern- ing women and AIDS is transmis- sion from mother to child before, during or after birth. "Infected women and babies are the big news today in AIDS epi- demiology," Fekety said. "All in- fants whose mothers are infected carry HIV-positive antibodies. It may be months for HIV-positive an- tibodies in babies to show up as infectious." But recent studies have shown that at least 70 percent of infants, born to HIV-infected mothers are ac- tually not infected. "There is defi- nitely a trend in improvement with vertical (mother to child) transmission," Schuman said. Transmission usually occurs during birth, and it is very unlikely for infants to contract the infection after delivery except through breast feeding, Fekety said. "Most probably think that transmission occurs in the uterus in the birth process. There are many, many arguments about this. In some babies, the infection may develop as early as 12 weeks," Schuman said. But she added, "There are kids who presumably don't show up with See AIDS, Page 2 Vicinus honored for leadership, academics Man threatens BYU trustee with dynamite Students band together to captwrg assalant by Jon DiMascio Daily Gender Issues Reporter Like the Renaissance woman of Victorian England, Martha Vicinus entertains diverse interests and multiple talents. She acts as scholar, lecturer and mentor in the University's Departments of Eng- lish, Women's Studies, and History. Although students who see Vicinus in her knit cap with earflaps might mistake her for a Keebler Elf, and bartenders at Rick's still card her when her gray hair is hidden, people listen when the mild-mannered professor speaks. Last month, Vicinus was hon- .ra ..:,tha Q - ruAa-a n%%Y-r Goddard Award recipient, said Vicinus received the award be- cause she goes beyond her duties as a professor and increases awareness of women's issues. Hollingsworth said women of- ten struggle against each other rather than working together to advance common causes. "There is a fallacious assump- tion that women support each other. It's not well known that women often place other women in counterproductive situations," Hollingsworth said. Vicinus said she avoids this problem by identifying herself with more than one University department. «T -1 .. - . . n r rr . a by Kerry Colligan Daily Staff Reporter Who says nothing ever happens in Provo? Sunday night, Brigham Young University (BYU) - located in Provo, Utah - was the scene of a hostage situation. Howard Hunter, BYU Board of Trustees member and president of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, was accosted during a fireside address to approximately 17,000 BYU students. Hunter's speech was interrupted when Cody Judy, a 27-year-old director of public communications at BYU. Hunter did not respond. After approximately ten minutes, the students began singing "We Thank Thee Oh God, For The Prophet," a Latter Day Saints hymn. Ten minutes later,the students began singing 'We Thank Thee Oh God, For The Prophet.' During the hymnal, a non-student who attended the lecture approached the staiTe and distracted Judy suffi- A i