The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 21, 1993 - 3 Regents to meet for 'Thoughtful' discourse Administration to present quarterly report on code of non-academic conduct PETER MATTHEWS/Daiy Gay Liberation posted these flyers in the Modem Languages Building yesterday as a continued response to the conservative flyers the College Republicans posted Monday. Toster war taints AIDS week College Republicans deny responsibility for new posters, no group admits posting them By KAREN TALASKI DAILY STAFF REPORTER What started off as a campaign to raise AIDS awareness has turned into a paper war, with both political and special interest groups preparing for what might become a fight to the death. Students walking into class yesterday morning were greeted with signs that read, "Want to cure AIDS? Try internment camps" and "Blind faith, Subservience, Patriarchy. The College Republicans." Although the posters were allegedly signed by the politically conservative group, College Republicans President John Damoose denied responsibility for the new batch of posters, which he described as "sick" and "pretty hard core. i Mendbers of the College Republicans have come under fire recently because of their poster campaign in which morality and fam- ily values are lauded as possible cures for the AIDS virus. "We have ceased putting up signs as of Tuesday. We got our message out on AIDS and that was it," Damoose said. "They're making us out to look hateful. Truly, we have every bit of compassion for people who have this disease." The first protest against the posters began with the Gay Liberation Front, a gay-rights organization. Member Vika Gardner said the group has readied itself for a week-long battle by preparing an additional 900 posters to hang around campus. Gardner's posters ask students to "get the facts, nothing cures AIDS" and includes a telephone number students can call for further information. "I've been careful not to take their posters down or cover them up," Gardner said. "We have to let (the College Republicans) talk to show people how stupid they are." Gardner said she thought the copy-cat versions of College Republicans' posters were amusing when compared to theiroriginal coun- terparts. "(Damoose) really believes the word 'cure' is appropriate. Morality won't cure anything," Gardner said. "Somebody is clearly trying to make the College Republicans look more ridiculous than they already have." First-year LSA student Jonathan Berger said he thought the fake posters were a harsh reaction against the College Republicans. "I admire their aptitude for dripping sar- casm, but I don't think it's a very good re- sponse," Berger said. Rob Stewart, an LSA senior and member of the College Republicans, said he feels the anonymous group acted in an immature and ignorant fashion by mocking the message created by the College Republicans. "I don't care who put up the posters, but putting our name on something we didn't write is unethical," Stewart said. "We're not sorry for the posters we put up. We stand by them." Gay Liberation Front member Natasha Raymond said she appreciated all the atten- tion the posters have brought to AIDS Aware- ness Week, but encouraged students to attend actual events, which offer more accurate in- formation. "As long as the posters create an opportu- nity for discussion and a dialogue for medi- cally-correct information to the community, I think they're good," Raymond said. "But when it gets to a point where people are trying to hurt one another, it makes me sad." By NATE HURLEY DAILY STAFF REPORTER Students aren't the only ones facing mid- term reviews this week. Tomorrow, the University Board of Re- gents will be presented with the quarterly statistics on the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities at its monthly meeting. Maureen Hartford, vice president for stu- dent affairs, said the statistics are "pretty balanced" in number and makeup. "I was afraid we would be overwhelmed, but it's been a pretty good, steady pace," she said. The Office of Student Affairs will present a more complete evaluation of the Statement - the University's non-academic code of conduct - at the February regents' meeting and make suggestions regarding the State- ment. Although the business portion of the meet- ing will be held tomorrow on the University's Flint campus, the regents will meet today at 1 p.m. in the Rackham Building for "A Thought- ful Discussion of Political Correctness and Academic Values." The presentation is being coordinated by Law School Dean Lee Bollinger. The afternoon meeting will allow the re- gents to hear input from experts on the topic and then facilitate a discussion among the board and University President James Duderstadt. The main business items of the meeting are the fiscal year 1994-95 state budget re- quest and an external auditor's report. The University is requesting a $15.3 million in- crease from the state for the Ann Arbor cam- pus. State legislators have already said there will be a freeze in monetary funding to state universities. It is therefore unlikely the in- crease will be granted. The financial report for the fiscal year, which ended June 30, 1993, will also be presented. Although a major issue at last month's meeting was the amendment to Bylaw 14.0, which prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation, any further implementation deci- sions will come from the administration. The University is setting up a committee to look into how the bylaw will affect students and faculty. The 11-member committee, which is expected to be set up within a week, will present recommendations to Duderstadt on a rolling basis. "I don't think we necessarily expect them to have areport on a final project," Duderstadt said. "We may see some results fairly early," he added. Video game fight turns real at Union Two University students took a video game at the Michigan Union a little too seriously Tuesday, with po- lice having to break up their ensuing * fisticuffs. University Department of Public Safety (DPS) officers were called in to stop the fight that erupted outside the Union after a game of "Street Fighter II" at the building's video arcade. One of the students involved was taken to University Hospitals for stitches above his eye. Police released the other student pending warrant authorization. Cops break up assault at 'U' Hospitals Police responded to a call from the University Hospitals Tuesday, advis- ing them that there had been a physi- cal assault on the premises and that * the victim wished to press charges in the incident. The caller told officers on the scene that her boyfriend had been assaulted by her ex-husband, and that there was an injunction against her ex-husband authorized by the Jackson County Police Beat0 court. However, a check revealed no in- junction against the man. DPS officers met with all three subjects, and police reports indicated that the boyfriend did not want to press charges against the other man. The ex-husband was then escorted from the building after being read the University policy on trespassing. Paintings pirated from School of Art and Architecture Two oilpaintings were stolen from the School of Art and Architecture on North Campus over the weekend, ac- cording to DPS reports. Employees said the paintings, val- ued at more than $550, were taken from an unlocked holding bin on the second floor of the building some- time last weekend. nize him again. Wanted man bagged on Diag Also Tuesday, DPS officers took a man into custody who had an out- standing bench warrant from the Ann ,Arbor Police Department (AAPD). The officers observed the man in the Diag before stopping him. The man was turned over to AAPD and jailed in lieu of $1,000 bond. Woman exposed to more than elements in Arb A woman called police Monday to report a suspicious encounter with a man in Nichols Arboretum. The woman told officers that she was walking in the main valley of the Arboretum when a man approached her and exposed himself to her. The man made no attempt either to touch her or to talk to her, the woman told police. DPS officers searched the area for the man - allegedly wearing only a gray sweatshirt - but could not lo- cate him. The woman told police she had never seen the man before, nor did she think she would be able to recog- Bike thieves strike again ...and again ... and again Bicycle thieves continued to plague the University in the past week, with four thefts reported to DPS since last Wednesday. A mountain bike valued at $250 was stolen from outside the Modern Languages Building Thursday after robbers cut through a cable lock. Another mountain bike was stolen from the rack outside the Michigan Union, valued at more than $300. A wheel was also stolen from a cycle locked up outside South Quad. Phony DPS officer attempts to collect for the homeless A confused woman called DPS last week to report an unusual hap- pening at her off-campus apartment. The woman told police that a man had come to her home, stating that he was with "University of Michigan Public Safety," and had come to cite her for a noise violation from the previous weekend. The man was not wearing a uni- form but did have a picture identifica- tion card and a badge. After telling her of the noise viola- tion, the woman said the man contin- ued to ramble on and eventually at- tempted to solicit money for home- less people. When the woman told him she was not interested, the man left the apartment without further incident. The woman told police she had never seen the man before. DPS has turned the incident over to AAPD. University Stores makes switch from dirty peanuts By JEFF MAEHRE FOR THE DAILY The University recently began test- ing a new strategy in its quest toward environmental friendliness. University Stores, which provides University buildings and academic departments with supplies, has switched from styrofoam to biode- gradable peanuts - in the hope of being safer and more environmen- tally conscious. In the past, Stores distributed Styrofoam peanuts and had users re- turn them after receiving a package. However these efforts at conserving failed. Many of the peanuts came back with trash mixed in, which Bonny Webber, University Stores warehouse manager, said made reusing most of them impossible. "I was having to throw away the vast majority of the peanuts that came back," she said. "There were some major safety issues with employees who had to put their hands in them because (the pea- nuts) would come back with foreign objects and garbage in them," Webber added. She said one bag of peanuts had an I.V. bottle in it. Other forms of medi- cal waste found in the peanuts led Stores to ask the University's Occu- pational Safety and Environmental Health office to scan the peanuts for 'We're trying to do this more environmentally.' -Bonny Webber University Stores Warehouse Manager radiation before Stores employees handled them. No radiation was ever found. But Erica Spiegel, special projects coordinator for Grounds and Waste Management, said she is not happy with Stores' decision to stop using the Styrofoam peanuts. "They didn't do a good job of educating people that contamination is a problem. They just stopped pick- ing them up," she said. Spiegel also said she is not con- vinced the move to biodegradable peanuts will be better for the environ; ment. She said manufacturers often label products biodegradable "to make themselves look greener than they really are." Spiegel said the peanuts have to be submerged in water to successt fully decompose. She said instead ©f doing this, departments are throwing them away. "Nothing degrades in j landfill," she said. Webber said she hasn't received any feedback from the users on the new biodegradable peanuts. Corrections The four people appointed by the Michigan Student Assembly to the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union board will not become official members until accepted by the Tenants' Union. The court battle between the University and Carolyn Phinney has been going on for three years. Phinney was awarded $1.25 million in the settlement. Marion Perlmutter was found guilty of fraud. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. Student groups Q Amnesty International, weekly meeting, Dana Building, Room 1040, 7:30 p.m. Q Baha'i Student Associaton, meeting, Frieze Building, 4068, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Q Campus Crusade for Christ, weekly meeting, Dental Build- ing, Kellog Aud., 7-9 p.m. Q Gospel Chorale Rehearsal, Trotter House Auditorium, 7 p.m. Q Hebrew Table, sponsored by the AmericnaMovement for Israel, Michigan Union, Tap Room, noon. Q Korean Students Association, weekly meeting, Michigan Union, Crowfoote Room, 7- room 438, 7:45 p.m. Q Saint Mary Student Parish, Liturgical education session, Parish Pastorial council, 331 Thompson, 7 p.m. Q Women's Political Caucus, monthy meeting, Michigan Union, Anderson Room, 7:30 p.m. Events Q Brown Bears, Salmon, and Seals, speaker: Ben Fitzhugh, lunch and lecture series, Mu- seum of Natural History, room 2009, 12p.m. Q Career Pathways in Mathmatics, sponsored by Career Planing and Placement, 3200 Student Activities Build- Room, 6-9 p.m. U Study Abroad Fair, sponsored by the Office of International Programs, Michigan Union Ballroom, 4-6 p.m. U The Purification of the Em- peror, speaker: Keith Brown, sponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies, lecture series, Lane Hall Commons Room, 12 p.m. U The U.S. and the New World Order, sponsored by the Politi- cal Science Department and the Graduate Student Fellowship, Rackham, West Conference Room, 7:30 p.m. U Targeting Not-for-Profit Or- ganizations, sponsored by Ca- reer Planing and Placement, -- b Will Mc Cahills Daily Staff Reporter Study Abroad Fair Come l abroad progra Thursday, October 21, 1993 4:00-6:00 PM Michigan Union Ballroom earn about spending a year, semester, or summer on a university of Michigan sponsored or affiliated am. Experienced student participants and faculty Australia Canada Chile China England France Germany Ghana Hungary Indonesia Ireland Italy Jamaica Japan i { 1 1I I t r J: ..a