NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 30, 1997 - 7 Clinton considers apology or savery WASHINGTON (AP) --The debate over whether President Clinton should apologize for slavery is evolving into a call to apologize for another wrong: the rigid segregation endured by black Americans under Jim Crow laws. That suggestion was offered in some the 600 pieces of mail sent to the hite House and the offices of Clinton's advisory board on race since June. The board, which Clinton charged with analyzing a slavery apology, will meet for the second time today. Race board chairperson John Hope Franklin bolstered the suggestion yes- terday, saying in a radio interview that any presidential apology would have to extend beyond slavery and address seg- ation; because the institution of seg- egation endured for so many years after slavery ended. "The most rigid apartheid laws this country has ever seen were passed in this : century," Franklin told the American Urban Radio Network. "What are you going to do about all of the examples and practices of degradation and humiliation and seg- regation practiced in the 20th centu- r ? An apology for slavery is not ing to do it." Clinton appointed the board to spend a year gathering information on the country's racial climate that he will use to compile a report on race. The board's main activity is to conduct a series of town hall meetings where Americans can talk openly about race. The White House said that, for now, it is unlikely that Clinton will apologize r segregation, the same response it ve to the suggestion for an apology for slavery. "If you must do something now, today, the president doesn't think any AIDS drug fails in half of patients AP PHOTO President Clinton gestures while meeting with reporters in the White House briefing room. He discusses the possibility of the United States government apologizing for slavery. Acclaimed new drug only stops virus' advance temporarily TORONTO (AP) -Widely heralded new AIDS treatments that seemed to stop the virus' advance and revive patients from near death are now begin- ning to fail in about half of all those treated, doctors said yesterday. The disappointing reports suggest the tough virus is coming back after being knocked briefly into submission, just as many experts feared it would. "Over the past year, we had a honey- moon period," said Dr. Steven Deeks. "The epidemic will likely split in two, and for half the people we will need new therapeutic options." Deeks presented data from the University of California at San Francisco's large public AIDS clinic at San Francisco General Hospital. Prescriptions of so-called three-drug cocktails - two older AIDS drugs plus one of the new class of medicines called protease inhibitors - have clear- ly revolutionized AIDS care. In many places, more than 90 percent of AIDS patients are taking these combinations, and typically people start on them as soon as they learn they are infected, even before they get sick. Patients whose disease-fighting T cells were ravaged by HIV have gotten out of bed, regained normal lives and even gone back to work. However, many worried from the start that the virus would eventually grow resistant to the protease inhibitors and resume its insidious destruction. The latest data, presented yesterday at an infectious disease conference sponsored by the American Society of Microbiology, suggests this is indeed happening regularly. Decks and colleagues reviewed the records of 136 HIV-infected people who started on protease inhibitors in March 1996, when Crixivan and Norvir, the first two powerful protease inhibitors, came on the market. Most patients responded dramatically. Their virus levels dropped so low they could not be found on standard tests. But since then, the virus has returned to detectable levels in 53 percent. Although this is ominous, no one knows exactly what it means. "All of our 'failures' are clinically feeling very well," said Deeks. "It's very important to understand we have no idea of the prognosis of people who have resistant virus." Decks said other large AIDS clinics are having similar experiences, although his is the first to present the data publicly. "There is a whole mixture of expla- nations" for the failures, said Dr. David Ho of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center in New York City. Ho said that for people who had rel- atively low virus levels when they start- ed taking the drugs and had not used other AIDS medicines, failure almost always means they did not take their pills on schedule. Even missing a few doses can ruin the treatment. "Compliance is absolutely critical" Decks said. "When we say compliance, we mean rigid adherence to over 20 pills a day." Decks said his data are far different from the carefully controlled drug experiments sponsored by pharmaceu- tical companies to demonstrate the medicines' potential. These studies show far more encouraging results. Among the longest-running of these is a study of 28 patients who have been taking Crixivan, AZT and 3TC. Dr. Roy Gulick of New York University said Monday that after almost two years, the virus is still undetectable in 22 of them, or 79 percent. Decks said real-world experience is not as promising as the trials because patients in the studies are less sick to start with and more highly motivated to scrupulously follow their drug regi- mens. kind of apology would be productive at this point," said spokesperson Joe Lockhart. The matter will be referred to the race advisory board, Lockhart said. Judith Winston, the advisory board's executive director, said the board would explore an appropriate response to the whole question of apologies, but was "not spending a lot of time on that." Jim Crow laws, named for the black character in an 1830s-era song, were enacted by Southern states in the late 1800s. They required separate facilities for blacks and whites - sometimes even separate Bibles in courtrooms -- and were bolstered by the Supreme Court's 1896 decision that upheld Louisiana's "separate but equal" facili- ties on railroads. Segregation endured even after the Supreme Court's 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, which called for integration of schools. It was officially eliminated by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, although *civil rights activists argue that its vestiges linger today in such areas as education and housing. The White House shunned the slav- ery apology idea because it would touch off a demand for reparations - govern- ment compensation to the descendants of African slaves. Clinton ruled out reparations in June, saying it would be impossible to determine who should be paid. Privately, Clinton aides say an apolo- gy for Jim Crow seems more acceptable because it was a more narrowly focused racial action. An apology would provide a natural means for Clinton to defend affirmative action and other federal programs created as a remedy for inequality. A sampling of the president's mail, provided to The Associated Press on the condition that the authors' names be concealed, showed some writers calling directly for an apology for segregation, while others proposed that Clinton address segregation in some form so that the country can start dealing with slavery's deeper wounds. 0"It is time for a moral reckoning with segregation," said an Aug. 23 letter from a writer who identified himself as a historian at Stanford University. "I am convinced that multiracial democracy cannot be achieved until the nation faces up to its history of racial segrega- tion." Not all writers were pleased with the notion of an apology. "Let's just forget about white people, you know. Let's make them the minority,"said a June 19 e-mail whose author signed off, "An Unhappy White Person." Another letter, dated Aug. 14, pro- posed nominating a colonial-era New York cemetery as a "world heritage site" under a 1972 U.N. convention. 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(elng-distance-babSen.1.optical illusion created by distance to misdirect the male DENVER (AP) - The trial of Terry Nichols got under way yesterday with the search for jurors unaffected by the tears and testimony of the first Oklahoma City bombing trial, which ended with his co- defendant sentenced to death. Defense attorney Michael Tigar was turned down when he argued it was no longer possible to find an impartial jury in Colorado. Despite the difficulty of finding an impartial jury, Denver defense attorney Scott Robinson said many people still don't know Nichols. Nichols was indicted two years ago on charges of conspiracy, use of a weapon of mass destruction, bomb- ing federal property and murdering eight federal law enforcement offi- cers in the line of duty, all punishable by the death penalty. Timothy McVeigh was convicted of the same "In realitj, charges. Nichols' role in the attorneys say he didn't know larfeIv Un, bombing to avenge those deaths. According to Time, Nichols said McVeigh was much more "hyped" about Waco than he was. Prosecutors say Nichols played a key role, acquiring ammonium nitrate fertil- izer and other bomb components, rob- bing a firearms Army buddy, testified during McVeigh's trial that McVeigh asked him to take part in the conspiracy because "Terry wanted out anid Terry did not want to mix the bomb." Fortier said he refused to help. Fortier pleaded guilty in a plea bar. gain and faces a 23-year sentence for running stolen weapons that federal agents believed helped finance the bombing. "The only real battle will be over Terry Nichols' life," Robinson said. "If Michael Tigar can save Terry Nichols' , Nichols' P bombing is kknOWn. f dealer to finance the purchase of a racing fuel and the get- I