9 Page 8-The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition -Thursday, September 10, 1992 Blues and Jazz Fest makes comeback in September Adolescent sexual assault lifts college by Annette Petruso Twenty years ago, Ann Arbor had an event. A real music festival, on par with any international concert, could be found near campus on the Otis Spann Memorial Field (now part of Huron High School). Its title was the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival, taglined "a real good time," and the shows featured such legends as Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Ray Charles, Ornette Coleman, BB King, Miles Davis - just to name a few. Nineteen years ago, the last Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival hap- pened. This year, it's being revived. Hopefully, this time, it's here to stay. FIRST TIME 'ROUND Peter Andrews, co-promoter of this year's Festival as well as the original two, claims, "There's a lot of great karma attached to the event from people who were there." The Blues and Jazz Fest also has a history before '72. Andrews explains, "There used to be a Blues Festival here. John Fishell ... put on two Blues Festivals (in '69 and '70) that were beautiful events on the same field where we did. "So when I got the job of Events Director at the University, I was contracted to put concerts on. Then Vice President Knauss ... said 'Why don't we revive this event?' It looked like a pretty nice event. "I looked into it and said expand the base to blues and jazz, which no one had ever done. I see now in fes- tival magazines there's a few, but it's still a unique combination. "Doesn't seem that crazy to me, the two forms (of music) that America has given the world ... I looked into it and put together a women's: WASHINGTON (AP) - Women ran twice the risk of rape or attempted rape during their first year of college if they had been sexually assaulted as adolescents, suggesting a not-yet-understood link, says a study released Sunday. Researchers also found that the risk of rape or attempted rape during adolescence was higher in woinen who had been exposed to family violence or sexually victimized as a child. However, these childhood experiences had no direct bearing on the risk of rape or attempted rape in the first year of college, said researcher Jacquelyn White, a psychology professor at the University of North Carolina at . . Bonnie Raitt jams at the 1972 Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival. She's returning to headline this year's program. Photo reproduced from 1972 Michiganensian. See FESTIVAL, Page 16 There are no rules when it comes to sharp off-the-field fashions for back to school. Follow your own game plan and at the same time show your school spirit! Essential elements for your sports wardrobe: T-shirts, tank tops, sweatshirts, sweatpants, shorts, outerwear and caps. All at competitive savings that can't be beat. Excludes Champion apparel. Reg. 13.99-129.99, sale 10.49-97.49 Athletic Apparel dept. PRICES GOOD THROUGH SEPTEMBER 12, 1992 rape rate Greensboro. She said the results suggest that rapists can sense vulnerable women, but "what it is that they're cluing in on, I really don't know.... Obviously, these women aren't walking around wearing a sign that says 'Assault me,"' she said in an, interview. She also stressed that her results do not mean that women ar" responsible for being raped. Rape was defined in the study along legal lines, including sex coerced through physical force, alcohol, drugs or threat of force, and sexual acts such as anal or oral intercourse with force or threats of force, she said. CODE Continued from page 1 believed it violated Constitutional standards of free speech. This stance was then adopted by MSA. Students have complained they had no input into the various drafts being considered to replace the in- terim policy. To address these concerns, Hartford met this past spring with;; various U-M organizations, includ-2 ing the SRC, Minority Student Services, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, and the Center for Education of Women. Hartford said the meetings were productive in working toward an alternative to the code. But many in the university com- munity are still questioning the greater implications of Supreme Court decision. LSA senior Jewel Shim said she felt the ruling was ominous. "People can take this further,"* she said. "Burning crosses can be put under arson or trespassing but the motivation behind it is racial and threatening." Graduate student and Baker- Mandela Center boardmember Regina Freer said she believes the Court is accepting and protecting "a history of racism." "I think fighting racism on cam- pus is a far more difficult task be- cause of this ruling," Freer said. However, Michigan Student Assembly Vice President Hunter Van Valkenburgh said he doubted' the ruling would affect students. "The university has a lot of dis- cretion as to whether something is,"4 punishable or not," Van Valkenburgh said. "The president's personal power is a bigger threat than any code." LSA senior Steve Anderson also'. said he believes the ruling would not change the atmosphere on campus. "For the most part, people at the university are more conscious of the differences between people," Anderson said. "There will be a few" bad apples who don't know how to be polite but I think that there's" enough awareness going on at the university that people know how to treat others." Executive Director of University'< Relations Walter Harrison agreed with the ruling's general intent. "The ruling may motivate some people (into thinking) that all man- ner of bigotry is condoned and that's a real worry for me," Harrison said. "But I believe you fight bad ideasH with good ideas, and we'll be better off if we engage the widest, possibilities." John Matlock, director of the, Office of Minority Affairs, said the' ruling reflects a "concerted undoing" of gains attained through past civil rights legislation. Be Smart! Reserve your books ahead. See insert in this paper or call: 1-800-765-6424