Weather Toilght: Mostly cloudy, low around 20°. Tomorrow: Chance of snow showers, high around 30'. 'Eflan tt ti One hundredfive years of editori'alfreedom Tuesday November 28, 1995 DOW, ..-. -. ...e75 : -- fly s : - ,a - - ,lam , y; _,. ". work to boost AIDS' attention 0 Annual candlelight vigil and march to be held on Friday By Heather Miller Daily Staff Reporter Natasha Raymond, an SNRE doc- toral student, knew the first gay man in Boston who died of AIDS. "All around me when I lived in Bos- ton people were contracting (AIDS)," she said. "For me, it's a very real issue.". Raymond is now a volunteer for AIDS Awareness Week, which started yester- day and runs through Dec. 1. Throughout the week, various Uni- versity groups are sponsoring events to heighten AIDS awareness including the annual candlelight vigil and march Fri- day at the Michigan Union. "AIDS is not a gay disease, a minor- ity disease or a disease that affects only 'them.' It belongs to 'us' and must be stopped," said Jennifer L. Smith, assis- tant coordinator ofNorth Campus Com- mons Arts and Programs. Posters on AIDS awareness are cur- rently displayed in the North Campus Commons Atrium. Prof. Marianetta Porter's first-year Art students de- signed the posters as part of a class project. "AIDS has had such a devastating effect," especially on student popula- tions, Porter said. "I was glad the word got out to University of Michigan stu- dents. "We tried to create posters that en- lighten the public," she said. Affixed to one poster is the cover of an exam blue book. The cover reads: "More students are getting back their test results." Inside, is written: "HIV + and it's 100% preventable. Learn the, facts." Also included in the week are a panel discussion tonight by local residents living with AIDS and an AIDS aware- ness speak-out Thursday night. LSA junior Laurie Kuhn, a member of AIDS Education Is On Us, said the two events would help "bring (AIDS) to a personal level." "My best friend is dying. I just saw him last week," said John Luther, a Social Work graduate student. "Every time I look at him, I want to make sure this doesn't happen to anyone else. No Clinton says U.S. troops crucial to Bosnian peace LSA senior Reginold Moss looks at panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt at the Michigan Union. A Wak of Awairne The Washington Post WASHINGTON -President Clinton last night said U.S. participation in the peacekeeping opera- tion in Bosnia means the difference between war and peace there and said Americans, despite the risks, "must choose peace." Clinton laid out his rationale for using Ameri- can troops to implement the Bosnian peace agree- ment, brokered by the United States in recent talks in Ohio, during a prime-time Oval Office address, his 10th as President. Its themes of a limited mission, a strict exit strategy and an operation aimed at securing peace rather than making war were all aimed at reassur- ing a nation and a Congress wary of risky military operations and concerned that the country might be pulled into a civil war. The United States cannot police the world or stop warfare everywhere, Clinton said, but "America-and America alone-can and should make the difference" when it is called on to "defend our fundamental values as a people and serve our most basic strategic interests." Clinton acknowledged the mission will not be without danger, and he issued a blunt warning to anyone threatening the peacekeepers: "America protects its own. Anyone - anyone - who takes on our troops will suffer the consequences. We will fight fire with fire and then some." Congressional leaders, particularly in the Sen- ate, yesterday appeared likely to raise sharp ques- tions and even to put conditions on the U.S. involvement, but in the end to let Clinton go forward. House members were more dubious. In a speech on the Senate floor a few hours before Clinton spoke, Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) . said Congress has a responsi- bility to advise Clinton but ' said, "The President has the authority and the powerunder ' the Constitution to do what he feels should be done, regard- less of what Congress does." After Clinton's address, Dole said in a television inter- Clinton view that it was "a good speech" and "a first step in the right direction," but added that the President "still has a ways to go." "I hope he'll have my support," said Dole, the leading candidate for next year's Republican presidential nomination. "It depends on the case that's made and on how the American people respond." House National Security Committee Chairman Floyd D. Spence (R-S.C.) said he was unswayed by the President's speech. Acknowledging the heavy toll war has taken on the Bosnian people, Spence said in a statement: "We must weigh American security interests as well as American moral interests, and this is where the President has a lot of convincing to do." Spence questioned Clinton's claim that Euro- pean stability is at risk and challenged the President's call for America to show leadership. "Leadership without clear direction is dangerous and a recipe for disaster when it involves deploy- ment of tens of thousands of American combat troops," he said. Clinton, who has heard numerous voices from both parties raise significant questions over the Bosnia operation over the past two weeks, tried to answer some of those questions or at least offer some reassurances. Beyond that he sought to make the case that the United States must pick up the mantle of leadership because no other nation or collection of nations can. "If we're not there, NATO will not be there," Clinton said in his 22-minute speech. "The peace will collapse. The war will re-ignite. The slaugh- ter of innocents will begin again." "Let us lead," Clinton implored. "That is our responsibility as Americans." Where the Troops Would Go Any American troops sent to Bosnia would be part of a 60,000-man NATO force helping to enforce a 600-mile long separation zone between the warring sides. The troops would be based in Tuzla, an Bosnia- industrial city Herzegovina that had 132,000' residents before the Tuzla war. More than 60,000 refugees have r poured in, mostly Sarajevo Muslims fleeing Serbs in eastern Bosnia. y, urope Critics note the troops A.'would be in a mountainous, Africaminestrewn countryside in harsh winter conditions. Source The Associated Press Daily Graphic Potential pitfalls' await U..-ed peace force The Washington Post BUDAPEST, Hungary - A U.S.-led NATO force of up to 60,000 troops will face enormous risks in Bosnia as it seeks to implement a complex peace deal hammered out over 22 days of negotia- tions in Dayton, Ohio, Western officials and Balkans experts say. Enemies as banal as the brutal winter weather and as mysterious as a cabal of Balkan business- men could conspire to turn the U.S.-led initiative into a morass, Western officials and military of- ficers say. Casualties are inevitable, they note, pointing out that in the three years since the United Nations has deployed troops in the former Yugoslavia, 214 U.N. soldiers have been killed and 1,451 wounded. Many of the wounded have been maimed by mines. Gen. Dennis Reimer, the U.S. Army's chief of staff, estimated recently that 6 million mines have been planted in Bosnia - many of them in uncharted fields, currently covered by snow. Most of those fields lie in the 2-mile-wide "zone of separation" between the warring fac- tions, where U.S. and other foreign troops are to be deployed. "While the U.N. job was difficult, they avoided trouble, often didn't shoot back and generally tried to keep a low profile," a Western military officer said. "NATO's work will be a lot harder because it will be viewed by some as an aggressor. I expect there will be a lot of angry men gunning for us and hoping to spill blood. After all, we bombed the Serbs for two weeks, kept the Mus- lims waiting (for military intervention) for almost four years and continually criticize the Croats." U.N. officials and Western officers say the most serious threat to NATO peacekeepers will occur during the surrender of territory as negoti- ated in the Dayton agreement. Under that plan, the Muslim-Croat federation will have to give back 15 square miles of land in northwestern Bosnia captured in a September offensive against the Serbs. Already, Croat gun- men are reportedly burning Mrkonjicgrad and Sipovo, the towns slated to be returned. The fate of the key facility in this territory -the- Bocac hydroelectric power plant, which will re- vert to the Serbs so that they can light their biggest city, Banja Luka - is unknown. one should have to die like this." University alum Nikki Neustadt at- tended the vigil last year. "The march. represented a cross section of the population affected by AIDS - he- mophiliacs, heterosexuals, gay men, drug users. Anyone can be affected by AIDS," Neustadt said. Elise Bryant, whose theater group, Common Ground, performed at the first World AIDS rally, said vigils are im- portant to bring public attention to an issue. "It's easy to ignore something that is painful," she said. But she added, "If people remain unknown and unrec- ognized, then more and more people will die from (AIDS)." Nov. 27 AIDS awareness videos from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at the School of Public Health I, third floor lounge.. Discussion with local residents from 7:30-9:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Nov. 28 Quilt panel-making sessions from 6-8 p.m. in the North Campus Commons Boulevard Room. Nov. 29. Lisa Tiger, an HIV-positive Native American will speak from 8-9:30 p.m. in. the Michigan Union Ballroom. Nov. 30 AIDS awareness speak-out from 8:30-10:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union Kuenzel Room. Panel sgets campag change LANSING (AP) -A Democratic task force combined its recommendations yesterday on revamping political campaigns with an attack on Republican legislation billed as a betterway of doing the same thing. The House Democratic Task Force on Cam- paign Finance Reform and Ethics spent 10 months gathering public testimony and study- ing how campaigns are financed and conducted. It found the public's perception has not changed since Republicans concluded their own study four years ago: Michigan residents are disgusted with the high cost and negative tone of campaigns. "We bring to the table today what the citizens of Michigan have asked for - meaningful re- form of a political system which has made the public more cynical of government today than it was after Watergate," said task force Chairman Rep. Pat Gagliardi (D-Drummond Island). The key recommendations by the task force include the following: Limit expenditures and contributions by an independent committee to the maximum al- lowed for an individual contributor ($500 in a House race and $1,000 in a Senate race). Require political action and independent committees to notify a candidate when an expenditure is made on the candidate's behalf. Prohibit lobbyists from making contribu- tions in state buildings. Enact a Code of Ethics for legislators and establish an Ethics Commission made up of legislators and private citizens. Enact the Clean Campaign Act that passed the House in 1994 but died in the Senate. It includes a code of fair campaign practices. The recommendations would continue to allow any number of caucus committees that fund campaigns. A Republican bill, scheduled to be dis- cussed by a House committee today, would combine those committees into four "Super PACs" -one for each Republican and Demo- cratic caucus in the House and Senate. Furthermore, those four committees would have no limits on the number or dollar amount of contributions to House and Senate cam- paigns. Also, it would define Native Americans as any other contributor. Native Americans may now contribute an unlimited amount of money to any political action committee or candi- date. Faculty say Dean of Students Office should be better-known By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily Staff Reporter The Dean of Students Office should make its functions and presence known to more of the inivrrit $5.5-million budget, has been one of Vice President Maureen A. Hartford's main projects. Karnopp noted the benefits of the dean's office, which was established in 1992. "Anv office which sets out to heln for Student Affairs. Karnopp suggested making presen- tations at faculty and student orienta- tions to clarify the office's mission and encourage everyone to use it. Some SACUA members expressed reservations about the internal work-