PERSPECTIVES The Michigan Daily Friday, June 17, 1988 Page7 Education on AIDS By ADAM SChRAGER It sounds like something Elliot Ness might yell. It is the name of a product that kills insects. Yet with all of these different connotations, no one would ever expect the word R.A.I.D. to be associated with sex- ual awareness. In my never-ending search for truth, justice, and the way to please my parents and family, I travelled last weekend to Dartmouth Univ- ersity for my second sister's grad- uation and my first personal en- counter with the campus group, R.A.I.D.(Responsible AIDS Infor- mation at Dartmouth). At this pre- dominantly conservative university filled with racial and sexual strife similar to that of Michigan, this group has imposed itself on a society that seemingly would have wanted to ignore them. The group, which is run by Dr. Beverly Conan-Sloane of Dart- mouth's Health Services, possesses a three-pronged approach to edu- 22 To the Daily: If you're thinking of moving into West Quad and can see THE UNI- VERSITY CLUB from your win- dow - DON'T MOVE IN! You'll never be able to have a "quiet hour" because the profit-making U-Club has "loud" entertainment EVERY NIGHT and all day on Saturday and Sunday. A funny thing happens on your hall floor, though. While the different bands are blaring out - your R.A. and others are going around enforcing QUIET HOURS. SOMETHING IS CLEARLY WRONG with a university that puts a studying environment second to U-Club profits. Students paying from $3500 to $4500 a year to live in Cambridge House, Williams House, or one of the other W.Q. houses are not all equal. While some get what they're paying for - other students, for the same money, get non-stop entertainment eating the naive public about the AIDS virus. The first step in the awareness program comes from printed information, posters, and most influential, radio advertising. In these radio commercials, con- temporary television shows are parodied in order to relate to the in- tended audience, the college student. For example, there is an ad with the crew of the starship "Enterprise" where Captain Kirk asks the rest of his crew whether or not he should proceed with the sexual encounter he is about to have with or without a condom. The spaceship crew is in unison in believing Kirk should use the condom, illustrated by Dr. McCoy's pleading that "For God's sake Jim, you can't risk your own life." The second step of the group is to bring in experts to provide in- sight in panel type discussions as to possible questions surrounding the AIDS virus. With the 11,000 people currently infected with AIDS (30 people afflicted every day last year), it is projected that 1.5 million people will have contracted the AIDS virus. The third and most influential prong of the R.A.I.D. approach to its collegiate audience is a trav- elling road show that dispels many of the myths and preconceived no- tions that people have concerning AIDS and its prevention. This road show has made major stops such as in the Rockefeller Center in New York City as well as minor stops in booming metropoli like Beloit, Wisconsin. Wherever the group may go though, the message remains the same: if you practice safe sex, then your chances for receiving the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome are reduced dramatically. Four students play the roles of educator, emcee, and comedian throughout this third stage. During the course of the road show, factual skits such as AIDS 101, to ques- r i ,rtN No . 55 , tiff r 1 tj- t CF.wo xis J Y SEE. A 5H NIO& CITY OW A HILL..." - PRES. REAC7At from 8:30 pm u night; even duri week. The union re and sound proof "it's making mo students not get worth like other to leave their r quiet areas on ca Ironically, it's Law, and other C grad students Williams House U-Club NOISE University Hous act! The U-Clut I'm moving alo from W.Q. Need constant turno bridge/William for "new vice down-expensi suckers! To the Daily Last week th on the racist a upon the anti-al interviewed a ra erroneously des ntil 2:00 am every Coalition Against Racism (UCAR) ng study and finals and the Free South Africa Coordi- nating Committee (FSACC) as fuses to cooperate "two white organizations" and pre- the U-Club because sumptuously suggested that the )ney." Yet, the 100 presence of these anti-racist sym- tting their money's bols are irrelevant to Black students students and have on campus. Such comments reflect ooms to find other not only a total lack of knowledge impus. about the two organizations cited, all those Business, but a callous insensitivity for the ambridge advanced plight and struggle of our Black and freshmen in sisters and brothers in southern that face the most Africa. POLLUTION. The First of all, both UCAR and sing Division won't FSACC are multi-racial organiza- b won't cooperate! tions, not "white" organizations. ng with 150 others The reasons for that are relatively lless to say there's a simple and straightforward. In a so- ver at W.Q. Cam- ciety where the overwhelming ma- s-so lots of room jority of the population is white, it ims." Come on is frivolous and perhaps borderline ve W.Q. rooms for suicidal to write off millions of potential political allies simply be- -Jay Le Gorio cause of skin color and not political May It choices. Virtually all Black Ameri- can leaders from W.E.B. DuBois, the "father" of Pan Africanism, to e Daily did a story Martin Luther King, Ella Baker, nd violent attack and even Malcolm X near the end of partheid shanty and his life, recognized not only the ndom passerby who importance but the necessity for al- scribed the United lies in the struggle against racism. UCAR and FSACC share this your letters view and believe that since our n article or politics are determined in our heads ething that and not in our genes, everyone has ust want to ' a choice to make as to whether they AGE will accept or fight against racism and other forms of injustice. We further feel that whites who opt for Publications the latter should be welcome in ant-racist organizations. At the tion/answer sessions regarding the actual functions regarding a condom are performed. Issues of whether putting on a condom breaks the "sexual mood" or the size that condoms come in are dealt with continually. The almost guaranteed highlight of the show comes when the aud- ience is asked how long it takes to put on a condom. There is generally one audience member that boas- tingly says that it takes "5-10 seconds." At this time, the students invite the participant to the stage where they reveal a male dummy that allows the audience member to practice what he/she preaches, while being timed by the leaders. Another interesting moment in the program deals with the size of the condom. Many people are under the impression that the standard condom is not big enough, but this is quickly dispelled by the forum leader that blows up the condom to what seems like epic proportions. While there has generally been positive response to this program, one campus newspaper labelled the program as fabricating a societal problem and using scare tactics in its methods. If information and knowledge are scare tactics, then I have no idea what I am doing in an institution of higher learning. There can be no mistaking that there is a real problem. Recently, scientists started to randomly test college students for the AIDS virus on 40 different college campuses. The results are unknown, but with informational, helpful, and inno- vative programs such as R.A.I.D., those results can be negative, or dare I say positive. Schrager is the Sports editor at the Daily. same time, however, and perfectly consistent with this view, we feel that those most directly affected by racism are in the best position to define it and combat it. Therefore, we uphold the principle that our organizations are and should be led primarily by people of color. Incorporating the struggle against sexism into our outlook, we also see the leadership of women of color in particular as crucial. Thus, both organizations were initiated by and are largely led by people of color and continue to be in full solidarity with other people of color from Ann Arbor to Johannesburg. Finally, the shanties were built and resurrected at least a dozen times by Black, white, Asian Am- erican, Latino and Native American people at various times. It is one of the few public symbols on central campus that reminds students and others of the racist tyranny under which 20 million Black South Af- ricans suffer. If that sole reminder does not "mean" something to every conscientious student on campus, but especially to those of us who are a part of the African diaspora, then we have more prob- lems than most of us realize. We doubt that this is the case. How- ever, we suggest that the brother quoted adequately inform himself before he criticizes, and more fully examine the implications of his use of the term "irrelevant" before he dismisses the symbols of a struggle which should be at the forefront of all of our thoughts. - Pam Nadasen, FSACC Tracye Matthews, UCAR, BSU Barbara Ransby, UCAR, BSU June 15 The Daily "Perspectives" page welcomes and input. If you want to respond to a editorial in the paper, comment on som happened on campus or in the world, or j vent your frustrations, write us at: THE DAILY PERSPECTIVES PA 420 MAYNARD ST., A2, MICHIGAN 48109 or drop off your letter at the Student 1 Building, Second Floor.