PROCESSED WORDS A plague of lies BY SANDRA STEINGRABER In the early days, it was called "the Gay Plague." Then, when it be- came obvious the virus had no particular sexual preference, it was deemed by the media "the 20th Century Plague." A host of morbid connotations are evoked by that label: gross suffer- ing, contagion, hysteria, divine punishment. These accurately reflect the anxieties many people harbor about AIDS. But the notion of AIDS as plague reveals little that is truthful about the disease itself. A plague implies massive and indiscriminate decimation. Nearly 100,000 people have died of AIDS worldwide since 1981. During the same time period, 14 million people died of measles. Most of these cases were in the Third World. In places where water is clean and food abundant, measles is seldom fatal. Measles is preventable with vaccines. AIDS is neither. Maybe only diseases with no known cures get to be defined as plagues in our modern First World imagination. Death by diseases we understand - lives snuffed out by poverty and neglect - don't qualify as "a 20th Century plague," no matter how high the casualties. A plague implies destruction without prejudice. And yet in New York City, the vast majority of babies born with AIDS (one in every 60) are in fact Black and Latino. A disproportionate number of homeless people are infected. Some Native American peoples are threatened with extinction because of their high rates of infection. The AIDS pamphlet sent out by the U.S. Surgeon General last month to every U.S. household emphasized how democratically the disease claims its victims: It is not the group you belong to, we are assured, but rather the behavior you engage in which puts you at risk: Avoid the be- havior and avoid the plague. Such statements are tautological and misleading since behaviors - such as intravenous drug use - define certain groups. It's a bit like say- ing that freezing to death is caused by sleeping under bridges rather than by being homeless. Funny how death by exposure strikes so few home- owners. In fact, heterosexual women as a group are more at risk from unpro- tected intercourse than heterosexual men. Babies bom to mothers who sleep with drug-abusing men are more at risk than babies born to non- drug users. So much for groups. While the pamphlet discusses semen as a possible route of infection, menstrual blood is not even mentioned. Gay sexual practices are discussed at some length; nothing is said about techniques common to lesbian sex. So much for behavior. A plague implies a state of emergency. But the designation of AIDS as plague can't have much to do with the urgency of our society in respond- ing to the crisis. The U.S. government spent more money in one month of research on Legionnaire's Disease than it did in the first five years of AIDS research. While the government's educational pamphlet blithely emphasizes the democratic nature of the disease, no moves have been made to democratize methods of prevention or treatment. The United States remains the only nation in the world (other than South Africa) with no national health plan. The drug AZT, the only known treatment, is available to those who can pay. The President's AIDS Commission identified rampant discrimination in housing, employment, insurance and medical care as major factors in spreading the disease. And yet social spending in all these areas has been slashed. Maybe, as someone once suggested to me, AIDS is properly called a plague because it is now possible to die from sex. But if this is true, then AIDS must only be a plague for men since women have always run the risk of dying from sex. The number of deaths in the world due to pregnancies, abortions and childbirth is equiva- lent to a jumbo jet full of women crashing every five minutes. No one is calling these deaths a plague. More likely, AIDS is given a special designation because of its con- nection with blood and semen, because of the dread it engenders and the suspicion it arouses. Curiously, AIDS paranoia is not part of the human response among the poor in Africa where the disease is taking a huge toll. Traveling through East Africa last year, I met no one who felt there was anything remarkable about AIDS - except one military officer in a garrison vil- lage in Sudan. The occupying military forces were suspicious of the vil- lage's political loyalties. The villagers were hungry and sick with dysen- tery; their crops and cattle had been destroyed in the fighting. One old man fell critically ill while I was there. When he died, the villagers organized a funeral. The officers watched the ceremony nervously and later one approached us, "Why did this man die? Did he have AIDS?. If so, we will all run away!" I almost answered yes. The Michigan Daily - Friday, July 15, 1988-- Page 3 ISR director to take S BY SUSAN LONGWORTH The University's Institute for Social Research director will leave next year to assume a similar posi- tion at Stanford University. Philip Converse, who has taught at the University for 28 years, said the Stanford position will be a "wonderful job," though he added that he "would've been happy to stay here" if he weren't offered the Stan- ford post. Converse said his primary duty at Stanford's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences will be operating its fellowship pro- gram, but he hopes the position will still leave a significant amount of tanfordps sional duties. time for research. The University currently has no Converse, a Political Science and plans to replace Converse, although Sociology Prof. who became director a committee will be formed within of the ISR in 1986, is well known the next couple of weeks to search for his research of voting trends and for a replacement, Converse said. American lifestyles. But until then, Converse's col- William Bowen, chair of the leagues and students say he will be Stanford center's board of trustees, missed. Joel Kaji, a University announced Converse's appointmentg student in the polits last week. Bowen called Converse an graduate mentnhaldtical sci- ence department, called Converse "outstanding scholar" who has a "One of the most available, accessi- long association with the center and ble, helpful" professors he has ever administrative experience. known The Stanford center, an indepen- James Wessel, Assistant ISR Di- dent organization created in 1954' rector, said Converse has a allows 45 to 48 research fellows to "charismatic leadership style" and an conduct social science research for "extremely good academic reputa- nine to 12 months free of profes- ," Assoc. AD praises football center BY NANCY LIPIN Associate Director of Athletics Donald Lund said this week the de- cision to build a new $12 million "Center of Champions" was a matter of "keeping up with the Joneses." But some members of the Control Board for Intercollegiate Athletics - which makes Univer- sity financial athletic department decisions - said they were under- informed about plans for the pro- posed football training center. Lund said the building is needed to maintain athletic competitiveness with schools such as Ohio State, Michigan State, and the University of Minnesota, which have recently added extensive football facilities. Without the revenue generated from football and basketball, he con- tinued, the athletic department would have to request University general funds to support the less popular, less profitable sports. "Football and basketball carry the department," he said. Board member and Engineering Prof. Steven Pollack agreed that the existing center needed to be replaced, but he said the board had not been sufficiently informed of the depart- ment's financial actions. "We were told things were in the works, but not details," Pollack said. Ultimately, the regents must ap- prove the center. University Athletic Director Bo Schembechler announced plans for the center last week. He was unavail- able for comment. The funding for the center will come from alumni sources. The de- partment hopes to reach this goal solely through fundraising and has already raised $165,000 in outside contributions. Lund said the center will be completed by May, 1990. The foot- ball team will use the football stadium locker rooms during prac- tices until then. MEXICAN CUISINE- LIKE YOU'VE NEVER HAD BEFORE! La Casita Featuring our de Lupe Spring & Summer Outdoor Cafe BREAKFAST: Sat.-Sun. 9-2 pm LUNCH: Tue.-Fri. 11-2 DINNER: Tue.-Th. 5-9:30, Fri.-Sat. 5-10, Sun. 5-9 20% OFF any meal, by mentioning this ad. 315 Braun Ct. 994-3677 (across from Kerrytown, off of 4th Ave.) Just a short walk from campus! I