The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 18, 1989 - Page 3 Hugo strikes Vir in Islands SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -4 Hurricane Hugo plowed into the U.S. Virgin Islands on a collision course with Puerto Rico late yester- day after ripping through the north- astern Caribbean with 140 mph winds and leaving at least six people dead. At least 80 people were injured on the French island of Guadeloupe. and 4,000 were left homeless, French officials said. The region's most powerful storm in a decade was expected to roll into Puerto Rico early yesterday. The government mobilized the National Guard, and residents rushed for last-minute supplies and taped and boarded windows. At 9 p.m. EDT, Hugo's center was located near latitude 17.2 degrees north and longitude 64.3 west, about 140 miles east-southeast of San Juan, said the National Weather Service in Florida. The storm slowed slightly from 12 mph to 10 mph, the Weather Service said. The Virgin Islands' population is 106,000 and Puerto Rico has 3.3 million people. Hurricane-force winds were gusting to 97 mph at St. Croix and to 90 mph on St. Thomas late Sunday. Those two islands have iost of the Virgin Islands' popula- tion. In San Juan, the Port Authority *nnounced that it was closing the Munoz Marin International Airport to all flights at 6 p.m. It said all in- ternational carriers had removed their Groups praise sexual assault case decision Asociatd Pres by Laura Counts Daily Women's Issues Reporter Members of local sexual assault prevention groups have praised the Michigan Court of Appeals decision that ruled a University student did not maliciously accuse University Visiting Prof. Thomas Rosenboom of sexually assaulting her. The ruling, which was handed down last week, upheld a lower court decision against Rosenboom, who filed a defamation of character suit against the women in October, 1987. Rosenboom's suit charged that the accusations made by the woman and her sexual assault counselor - Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center Counselor Kata Issari - were slanderous and caused. him emotional distress. In February, 1988, the criminal case against Rosenboom was dis- missed. Issari, against whom Rosenboom filed charges along with the student, expressed satisfaction with the ap- peals court ruling. She called the de- cision "important for securing the rights of sexual assault survivors and reinforcing the right of a rape crisis center to aid the survivor." "It is hard enough for survivors to acknowledge they have been as- saulted, much less take it to court," Issari said. "The court system came through for survivors." The Court of Appeals affirmed the two-part decision of Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Edward Deakes. Deakes had ruled that there was insufficient evidence to prove the women's accusation was mali- cious. Additionally, he recognized a legal privilege protecting her because she was following a University pol- icy which encourages cases of sexual assault to be reported. "The important point of the case," said Len Niehoff, the attorney for the defense, "is that it recognizes the importance of this University policy and grants protection to pur- suants of the policy." Niehof said although the ruling does not prevent similar suits, it may act as a deterrent because of the precedent set by the decision. SAPAC Director Julie Steiner said the threat of a civil suit has sent a "chilling, scary effect message to those who have been sexually as- saulted." Rosenboom filed his case shortly after a similar defamation of charac- ter suit was filed by a University engineering student in March, 1987. Steiner said she believes both lawsuits were used to scare the sur- vivors into dropping charges. She added that several people attending counseling recently have decided not to report their cases because of the fear that opposing suits may be filed against them. Last spring, State Rep. William Van Regenmorter (R-Jenison) and State Sen. William Faust (D- Westland) introduced legislation to, reverse what they feared was becom- ing a trend in criminal sexual assault cases. The proposed bill would pro-. hibit the defendant in a criminal sex- ual conduct trial from filing a civil suit against the accuser until the criminal trial is over. Hearings on, the bill are still pending. The decision on this case does not negate the need for the legisla- tion, Steiner said, but may act to prevent these cases from starting a trend. Residents of the north coastal town of Loiza listen to the radio for word on Hurricane Hugo yesterday. Some 1,000 residents of the town were placed in shelters as Hugo approached the island of Puerto Rico. planes from Puerto Rico except for one American Airlines A300 left be- hind for emergencies. Civil defense officials said up to 15,000 people could be evacuated from flood-prone areas in eastern Puerto Rico, and hundreds had al- ready been moved into a sports sta- dium in Mayaguez, the island's third-biggest city. National Guards and volunteers drove through San Juan, the capital yesterday, issuing emergency in- structions over loudspeakers. First reports indicated that the French island of Guadeloupe, the most southerly of the Leeward Islands, was the hardest hit of the string of islands forming a 600- mile arc from the Leewards to the Greater Antilles. Hugo slammed into-Guadeloupe, which has a population of 337,000, shortly after midnight, downing power lines and blackening out the island's 30,700 telephones, state ra- dio and television and telex service. State television in Martinique, Guadeloupe's sister island, said 3,000 were left homeless. The report could not be confirmed. Officials said many houses and buildings were damaged. The eye of the storm passed over St. Francois, a major tourist area on the eastern end of the island. Levin speaks to College Dems by Noelle Vance Daily Government Reporter U.S. Senator Carl Levin (D- Michigan) spoke candidly about American policy in Columbia and how that policy is affecting the Great Lakes states when he addressed members of the University's College bemocrats yesterday. Levin spoke informally with the group in Ann Arbor before attending a private fundraiser for his campaign -o be reelected to the U.S. Senate in 1990. Exact figures on the amount of money raised at the function were not available at press time, but attendees estimated that about 60-80 People attended, at $100 per person. Speaking to the college Democrats, Levin said America's "{drug war" in Columbia should be supported. However, he expressed out and not be able to dispose of its disapproval of the way President own waste. George Bush is funding the war. Levin did not take a firm stance The policy is taking money from on either side of the issue, said "lesser priority coast guard "leser piorty cast uar College Democrat and LSA Junior activities," such as monitoring ot Deb Goldman. oil-carrying ships, and that in turn is Levin also did not discuss the causing the Great Lakes to become issue of abortion, which has flavored more polluted, he said. other political speeches since the In expanding on the issue ofrcth r emetC ousp decssinthat environmental pollution, Levin recent Supreme Court decision that discussed the Midwest Compact. The gives states the authority to decide pact of seven states which includes whether abortion should be legal or Michigan allows for the disposal of not. nuclear waste from one state to be College Democrats President and dumped at sites in another state. LSA Senior Roger Kossen, Michigan is the first to receive however, said the discussion was di- nuclear waste from other states. The rected by the audience, and no one issue, said Levin, is whether asked about the abortion issue. Michigan should remain in the pact Levin has officially taken a pro- and not take other's waste, or drop choice stance. Demonstrators ask for special lounge Levin by Bonita Williams While most Ann Arborites were busy watching Saturday's football game, three men were demonstrating on the steps of the Michigan Union, where they urged the University ad- ministration to create a gay male and lesbian lounge. The men said they were represent- ing the gay community, but not any particular gay male or lesbian orga- nization. University graduate Ian Urning, one of the demonstrators, said the group had "no leader, no hierarchy." Another protester, graduate Gary Berdache, called the group "anti-or- ganization." The men said the picket was not intended as a protest, but to educate the University community. "We're not chaining ourselves to the door," Faid Blane McLane, a student in the School of Social Work. McLane car- ried a sign which read, "Homophobia is a social disease... requires social change... build a gay reading lounge." The members of the group said they want gay men and lesbians to be recognized as part of the University's diversity. "If we are to create a multi-cultural community, then it must be done in the commu- nity," McLane said. "Gay people don't even have a place to meet in the University at all," he said. In addition, the group wants the University to allow gay couples the same benefits as married heterosex- ual couples, including health bene- fits, football tickets, and access to married housing. ' Western Predicted to Win Emmys on Fox PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Westerns may be out of fashion on the screen, but the ripsnort- irig saga, "Lonesome Dove" was expected to win Sinday night's showdown at the Emmy Awards. The CBS miniseries that starred Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones scored the highest number of Emmy nominations in non-technical categories - 18, followed by NBC's frequent Minner "L.A. Law" with 17, and ABC's min- series "War and Remembrance" with 15.. Also expected to make a strong showing in thte three-hour Fox Broadcasting telecast was ABC's "The Wonder Years" with 14 nomina- t ons, ABC's "thirtysomething" with 13, and ;C's "The Golden Girls" and Fox's "The Tracey Ullman Show" with 10 nominations each. "Lonesome Dove" was a big winner even be- fore Sunday night's event, taking six Emmys in technical categories in non-televised ceremonies Saturday night. The miniseries won prizes for costume design, makeup, movie composition, sound editing, sound mixing and casting. Before the success of "Lonesome Dove" the Western had been largely moribund for well over a decade on both the big and small screen. This fall will mark the first time in 15 years that two Westerns have been on the network schedule- CBS' "Paradise" in its second year, and the new show "The Young Riders" on ABC. In 1958-59, by contrast, the top four shows were all Westerns: "Gunsmoke," "Wagon Train," "Have Gun, Will Travel," and "The Rifleman." Thirteen other shows, including "thirtysomething" and "The Tracey Ullman Show," won two technical Emmys each. Sunday night's spectacle at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, highlighted by a tribute to the late Lucille Ball, marked the end of a three-year contract between the Television Academy and newcomer Fox. Read a and LIoe ANXIETY ATTACKS? Do you have agoraphobia or sudden attacks of fear, apprehension or anxiety? If you experience such attacks 4 times a month or live in fear of them and are between 18 and 40 years of age you may be eligible for FREE evaluation, treatment and pay in a major U of M research study directed by G. Curtis, M.D. If you believe you are eligible call (Mon-Fri). U-M Anxiety Program 936-7868 Daiey C t 6i THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today See us first for all of your banking needs Speakers "Combining Noisy Images of Small Crystalline Domains in High Resolution Electron Microscopy," University of California, Berkeley Prof. David R. Brillinger, 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Meetings Michigan Hodgkin's Disease Guild House Campus Ministry, Liberation Theology Study Group, Guild House, 802 Monroe Street, 6 p.m. Jewish Feminist Group, Hillel, 7 p.m. On-Campus Recruitment Program Mass Meeting, Angell. Hall, Aud. A, 8:10-9:00 a.m. Michigan Wargaming Club, Union, 7 p.m. Asian American Association Mass Meeting, U n i o n " checking " 24-hour banking with Cirrus' & Magic LineĀ® It