4 Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 29, 1987 Project Community adds courses BY SHEALA DURANT The University's Project Com- munity program will be starting two new programs this semester, one at the Adrian Training School and the other at Southern Michigan State Prison at Jackson. Project Community has been a part of the University for the past 25 years. It provides service to the com- munity as well as a learning ex- perience for students. "The learning that goes on in Project Community is different than learning in the traditional class- room," said Director Jeffery Howard. "Project Community is concerned with the development of the whole student, not just the grey matter. "To gain knowledge it must include action and experience." At Project Community, students develop skills in the "real world" and learn problem-solving dealing with real-life problems - things they can't learn in the classroom, Howard added. Project Community offers pro- grams in organizational leadership, consumer advocacy, health care, edu- cation, and criminal justice. Several sections are still open. Students in- terested in Project Community pro- grams may register until tomorrow. Courses begin on October 1. Students attend a weekly forum, keep a journal, and write three short papers, and earn up to three credits, depending on how many hours are spent working in the community. LSA junior Chris Mims par- ticipated in Project Community's Criminal Justice program and met with prisoners - both adult and juvenile offenders. "With the younger kids (at Maxey Training School) we acted out skits, watched movies and played games to help kids build up their self- confidence," she said. Mims said she participated in "rap sessions" with older prisoners. About her overall experience she said "It helped me to better be able to relate to why youths commit crimes and get the other side of things. We compared what they wanted out of life and what we wanted out of life and it's really not that much dif- ferent. The Adrian Training School program was the brainchild of Project Community's Director of Criminal Justice Program, Susan Van Baalen. Van Baalen saw a need for volunteers willing to work with female juvenile offenders. Students will be playing "new games", a category of activities that promote team cooperation, not competition. Project Community has had programs at Jackson for 15 years. Students involved in this program will be tutoring inmates on all levels - from the functionally illiterate to those working toward a high school diploma. By doing this students are increasing chances for prisoners to get a job and get back into society. Rent stabilization petition drive launched By ALAN PAUL Four Ann Arbor residents launched a drive to stabilize rents in the city at a Michigan Union news conference yesterday. Members of The Ann Arbor Citizens for Fair Rent held a news conference at which they unveiled the body of their rent stabilization ordinance. They are beginning a petition drive to garner the 5,000 signatures necessary for the ordinance to be included in the April election. Spokesperson Mark Appel outlined the ordinance, which would provide automatic annual rent increases equal to 75 percent of the increase in the Consumer Price Index, as well as four other means by which landlords could raise rents. All increases together could not exceed 15 percent. Appel said that the 75 percent of inflation figure is fair for landlords because many of their expenses, such as mortgage payments, are no t affected by inflation. The group also said that the ordinance would not discourage pro- perty maintenance or construction, problems in other cities with rent control ordinances. New units are not subject to restrictions until after their initial rates have been set, and no rent increases will be allowed unless the rental unit is in compliance with state and local housing codes. "The ordinance is not like New York's," Larry Fox of the Housing Reform Project said. "We've learned from their mistakes. You won't see the South Bronx in Ann Arbor. "It's not going to solve t h e housing shortage for low income people and if it's real low, it won't help at all," Fox continued. "It will help most working people not on a fixed income. And, hopefully, it will keep the issue in the public eyes." Ann Arbor Citizens for Fair Rent will hold a rent stabilization meeting tonight at 7:30 at the Community High School Auditorium, 401 N. Division. Defense lawyers must use 'zealous' techniques IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Bomber crashes in Colorado LA JUNTA, Colo. - A B-1B bomber with six people aboard crashed yesterday in a ball of orange flame in the Colorado prairie after birds were sucked into the engines, but three crew members parachuted to safety, authorities said. The fate of the other crew members was not immediately known; the Air Force said they were listed as missing. It was the first crash of a regular production model of the B-1B, the nation's newest long-range strategic bomber. The survivors were reported in good condition with minor injuries at the U.S. Air Force Academy hosptial in Colorado Springs. The bomber, attached at the 96th Bombardment Wing, left Dyess Air Force Base in Abilene, Texas, early yesterday. It was headed for the Stra- tegic Training Range Complex near La Junta. Bush extols freedom in Poland WARSAW, Poland - Vice President George Bush made a dramatic appearance with Solidarity leader Lech Walesa yesterday and then urged the Polish people in a televised address to strive for "greater freedom." "To our freedom and your freedom," Bush said in Polish and English at the end of a live five-minute broadcast on state-run television that was unprecedented for an American official. He said that he met with Walesa and other Solidarity officials, and noted that he had visited the gravesite of the Rev.Jerzy Popieluszko, a pro-Solidarity priest who was slain by secret government police. But Bush did not specifically endorse Solidarity. The communist government responded in mixed terms to the address. "It seems to me...that he has not overcome all myths and illusions," the TV commentator said after. Mudslide kills 143 Colombians MEDELLIN, Colombia - An avalanche of red mud and rock killed at least 143 people, including 43 children, when it thundered down a moun- tainside and onto a slum area, officials said yesterday. Some residents estimated up to 500 people were missing in the scores of buried shacks. At least seven of the children killed were attending first Holy Com- munion parties when buried under the landslide Sunday in Villa Tina, an impoverished area of the industiral city of Medellin. Exhausted workers dug through 20 feet of mud looking for survivors and bodies yesterday. "We heard the noise that sounded like an explosision and soon after- ward a huge mass of rocks and mud descended upon us," said Mary Mos- quera, who lost three daughters in the avalanche. NRC finds fault at Fermi II WASHINGTON - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff has recommended a $75,000 fine against Detroit Edison Co. for failing to control water temperature in the reactor of the Fermi II nuclear power station, the NRC said Monday. The NRC said the water temperature on July 26 rose to 220 degrees while the plant was shut down fo maintenance and repairs. Licensed operators at the plant had "failed to properly instruct a trainee who was assigned the task of monitoring the reactor water temperature," said Russ Marabito, NRC regional spokesman in Glen Elyn, Ill. A. Bert Davis, NRC regional administrator, said the alleged violation was of "particular concern to the NRC because it involved the failure of four licensed operators to discharge their duties in a responsible manner." EXTRAS Lansing city councilmembers ban'U' fight song from streets LANSING - The University's famed fight song, "The Victors," has been banned from Lansing streets under a new ordinance written by a fervent Michigan State fan. "There's nothing melodic about that tune," Lansing city councilmember Sid Worthington said with tongue planted firmly in cheek. The admittedly partisan Worthington said the song - described by John Phillip Sousa as one of the greatest marches ever written - is noise pollution, pure and simple, so he had it banned under the city's new traffic code. "No vehicle shall be equipped with, or shall any person use upon a vehicle, any siren, whistle, or bell, or any other device which plays 'The Victors,"' the code said. Michigan travels to Lansing Oct. 10 for their annual showdown with the Spartans. "I think the law is not a joking matter," said Chief District Judge William Collette, adding that humor shouldn't be part of city ordinances. "If we treat our laws as a joke, others will too, even more than they do already," he added. If you see news happen,-call 76-DAILY. (Continued from Page 1) BATZER SAID though people like to think about the court system as a "truth-finding process," both the defense and the prosecution use "little dramas" in their attempts to persuade the jury. "A courtroom is a harsh place where the most private experiences of people.- issues which involve great emotional pain - are held up for public scrutiny and worked up by attorneys on both sides," Batzer said. "They must set aside their own feelings and just try to win. Their art is the art of persuasion and the trial is the theater." Gail Benson, a defense attorney in Detroit's Recorder's Court, said the defense must aggressively scrutinize the circumstances of an alleged rape because without that evidence, the jury would have no other information on which to base their decision, except the complainant's testimony. For example, Benson said whether a woman had been drinking is important in a rape trial because, "When women drink, it changes their inhibitions. It's one thing to say no, but when women drink, they give mixed signals." Neal acqui (Continued from Page 1) Also, E from the beginning there was not a could not case," Bila said. about alle Yesterday's proceedings began women on with an exchange between attorneys previously1 Boak and Cooper over the admis- Neal. The sibility of evidence. Judge Deake women we ruled the records were not relevant testify, wh and issued a protective order over the sustain t records. objection. Because alcohol impairs memory, Benson said, what a woman actually said to the man at the time of the alleged rape could be different than what she remembers she said the next morning. 'A courtroom is a harsh place where the most private experiences of people...are held up for public scrutiny.' - Judge James Batzer Michigan 19th Circuit Court Julie Steiner, director of the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, disagreed. "A trial for rape is one of the most difficult things someone can go through. Someone being drunk is not an excuse for rape. That's crazy," Steiner said. ANOTHER DEFENSE, Benson said, attorneys could use is that the defendant could have been getting mixed signals. Given certain social circumstances, such as a large party, she said, "What the woman may have said was not enough to let him know that she meant no. Saying it isn't enough. There's a fine line between coaxing and force." Also, Benson said the defense attorney must also consider the consequences: the penalty for Criminal Sexual Conduct One (CSC1) is up to life in prison. Detroit area attorney Sorenia Whittington said a defense attorney can do anything as long the judge and the prosecutor don't object. By testifying, Whittington said the complainant must be cross-examined. "Basically, the defense attorney tries to poke holes in the complainant's story and attack her credibility in order to put a reasonable doubt in the judge's and jury's minds that the defendant didn't commit the crime," she said. "As a defense lawyer, you really have to defend your client zealously whether you believer him or her or not." ted in fraternity rape trial Deake ruled that Cooper question the defendant egations made by two n Friday that they had been sexually attacked by prosecutor said the two ere reluctant to come and hich prompted Deake to he defense counsel's Next, the prosecutor sought to introduce three rebuttal witnesses. Deake disallowed all three rebuttal witnesses, because he said Dr. Dee Fenner, who examined the woman at University hospital, had no new evidence. He cited rules of evidence in denying Cooper the opportunity to call two of the woman's sorority sisters. The defense refrained from calling any character witnesses because Deake also ruled that Cooper could question these witnesses about any prior "bad acts" committed by the defendant. University of Wisconsin Platteville e-"-a4 -( The Center for Research on Learning and Teaching (CRLT) and The LS&A Project on Language and Development (PLRD) invite you to attend an exhibit on LANGUAGE AND TECHNOLOGY Tuesday, September 29, 3-6 pm Pendleton Room, The Michigan Union Presentations and Demonstrations: 3:00-3:30 Use of video disc technology and interactive video in language instruction, Edna Amir CoffingDept. of Near Eastern Studies 3:30-4:00 Using video filming and viewing for developing oral proficiency, Joan Morley, Program in Linguistics and English Language Institution 4:00-4:30 Use of computer assisted instruction in Chinese studies, William Baxter, Dept. of Asian Languages and Cultures 4:30-5:00 Satellite transmitted video programs in Russian classes Nusya Milman, Dept. of Slavic languages and Literatures 5:00-6:00 Open time for visiting exhibits which include materials from the above presentations and a special demonstration of IBM System-2 capabilities by an IBM representative 1 Vol. XCVIII - No.14 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$25 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term: $13 in Ann Arbor; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub - scribes to the Los Angeles Times Syndicate and the National Student News Service. e5l, 1 1 See Castles in the Air And learn your way around the world "If you have built castles in the air, now put the foundations under them." Henry David Thoreau Study in London for $3675 per semester. Includes air fare, resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. Study in Seville, Spain, for $2725 per semester. Includes resident TUESDAY 10-CLOSE jiO . 5tat Door Prizes * Posters * CORONA T-SHIRTS $5.00 " WIQB - Fox Village CLUB NIGHT _ coron Exta Editor in Chief..... ...........ROB EARLE Managing Editor..........................AMY MINDELL News Editor...............................PHILIP I. 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