The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 23, 1991 - Page 5 Dems. fight to levive rWASHINGTON (AP) - Democratic congressional leaders, hoping to revive efforts toward a consensus civil rights bill, want to Seet with corporate executives who called off negotiations after pres- sure from the Bush administration. AT&T chief Robert Allen, who halted big business' talks Friday, was said by a spokesperson to have halted talks just as it appeared they were nearing agreement with civil rights groups. "What they did was reprehensi- e," Ralph Neas, executive director Cf the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, said of White House officials. "They pulled out all the stops in an effort to scuttle the good faith negotiations." Democrats and civil rights lead- ers accused President Bush of trying to sabotage efforts to reach agree- ment out of a desire to keep the issue of racial quotas alive as a political Ssue for Republican candidates in 992. Bush contends the Democratic bill would lead employers to use racial quotas for hiring. "There's no question, especially in light of recent events, that the White House does not want a strong civil rights bill enacted into law. What the White House wants is a political issue around which to demagogue," Neas said. 0 Presidential spokesperson Marlin Fitzwater reiterated the administration support for its own bill and labeled the Democratic ver- sion a "quota bill." Asked if he were glad the corporate executives had pulled out of the talks, Fitzwater said, "Anyone is -free to talk with anyone." The Democratic sponsored bill is ntended to reverse a series of upreme Court decisions that made it more difficult for minorities to sue employers for job discrimina- tion. Eigth-graders are subjects of 'U' study on fitness BRIAN CANTONI/Daily Winners Saturn Corporation awarded members of Students Honoring Outstanding Undergraduate Teaching (SHOUT) $1,000 for their work in recognizing superior professors. Baker meets with Kuwaiti rulers as human rights abuses continue by Garrick Wang Daily Staff Reporter Twelve hundred Michigan eighth-grade students have received reports from the University's Fitness Research Center outlining positive ways to eliminate the health risks in their lives The Center helped the state schools appraise health knowledge, behavior, stress levels, and attitudes of their eighth-grade students through a computerized "wellness" survey. "We helped develop and imple- ment the survey because the state wanted to increase individual awareness and self-responsibility for good health," said Marilyn Edington, project director for the survey. The health survey is a new part of the Michigan Model for Comprehensive Health Education and was developed in 1988 with the Michigan Department of Public Health. Various versions of the health surveytare administered in-class to students from kindergarten to * eighth-grade. The Center introduced a comput- erized version of the "wellness" survey to eighth-graders three years ago. "We developed the computer- ized version because we didn't want to make (the eighth-graders) feel r uncomfortable about taking the survey," Edington said. She added that 1,200 eighth- graders who attended 20 randomly selected schools throughout the state participated in the first com- puterized survey. Eighth-graders answered ques- tions via computer which covered topics concerning personal care, health history, health habits, stresst ful situations, and knowledge iir health related issues. The responses were then sent electronically to the Center fi, analysis. Each respondent received a confi- dential, individualized report sum-, marizing the risk factor in his or her lifestyle and recommending posy tive change. The Center used lane guage compatible to the respon. dents' vocabulary to write the con-' fidential reports. The state is currently using the survey to establish a database whicW compares the responses collected, for the past two years. " Edington said approximately 25, percent of the respondents were ing crash dieting or other risky behav- iors which could harm their current and future health. She added that 40 percent of the, students reported they experienced at least one stressful life event such as the death of a parent, serious accil. dent, and the break-up with a boyfriend or girlfriend. DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - The rulers of Kuwait told Secretary of State James Baker yesterday that they were working on governmental reforms that he said could mark "a radical transforming" of the emirate. The Kuwaiti government has been accused of serious human rights abuses following its return to power. Kuwait is under martial law and its parliament was dissolved in 1986. A few hours before Baker flew there from Saudi Arabia, op- ponents of the ruling Sabah family were barred from holding a protest meeting, and last week Amnesty International said human rights abuses, including torture and execu- tions, had swept Kuwait since it was liberated. But Baker got an entirely differ- ent account on the situation in the country, one of the richest in the world, from the emir, Jabir al- Ahmed Sabah, and the crown prince, Saad Abdullah al-Sabah. Asked if he had taken up with Kuwait's rulers their boycott of firms that do business with Israel, Baker ended the airborne news con- ference. "I'm not going to comment on that," he said. In Kuwait, Baker got a close look at a legacy of the Gulf War - more than 500 burning oil wells that are being subdued at a rate of about 20 a week. Visiting near dusk, as the flames reached for the skies, Baker stopped at the Ahmadi field's well No. 57, which a "Red" Adair firefighting crew from Texas expects to have under control in a day or two. Baker's scheduled Syria's partic- ipation in a Mideast peace confer- ence. Earlier, he bid for Soviet cosponsorship of the initiative and gained the sideline endorsement of Saudi Arabia. Baker's scheduled sessions with President Hafez Assad and Foreign Minister Farouk Sharaa loomed as his most difficult challenge on the Arab side, as he attempts to fashion a format and agenda for the prospec- tive peace talks. He was expected to return to Israel today in hopes of re- solving its concerns about the scope of the proposal. On the way from Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, to Damascus, the secretary of state took a brief detour to Kuwait to reaffirm U.S. support of the emirate. Before leaving Jiddah, Baker had a 35-minute telephone conversation with Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmertnykh. Baker wants Moscow to cosponsor the peace talks, provided the Soviets re- sume full diplomatic relations with Israel after a 24-year lapse. Baker's detailed briefing of the Soviet official raised a possibility that Baker might fly to Moscow to firm up a jointly sponsored con- ference, provided he can resolve the Arab-Israeli differences over the agenda and the extent of third-party participation. Prince Saud, seeing Baker off to Kuwait, said "It was conveyed to the secretary that Saudi Arabia be- lieves it is time to put an end to the Arab-Israeli conflict and to achieve a comprehensive and just solution to the Palestinian question." r t r f r aM Burnham Associates 543 Church Street (313) 761-1523 OPEN DAILY 8:30-5:30 SATURDAY 11:00-3:00 SPECIAL FALL RATES Lease an apartment between April 22nd and May 15th 1991 and receive 50% off a month's rent! * 610 S. Forest 543 Church (2 Bedrooms) 1001 S. 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