The U-M Board of Regents apparently have a problem with the Open Meetings Act. However, despite losing a court battle on the subject, they still have little regard for it. AT Director Gary Senise's film "Of Mice and Men" succeeds where so many films fail because it avoids succumbing to the Hollywood trends so many films employ. SPORTSwnd Michigan only needed one half to put the Indiana Hoosiers to rest. The Wolverines coasted to victory after establishing a 31-3 halftime lead. Today Sunny and cold; H igh 45, Low 30 Tomorrow Showers possible; High 48, Low 34 I i I V kd*gal 'ati One hundred two years of editorial freedom Vol. CE ve, No.15 Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, October 19,1992 1992 The Michigan Daily Even plc go party-hoppn by Erin Einhorn Daily Crime Reporter The residents of 1302 Geddes Ave. began their Friday night by pulling out a keg, pumping their stereo and opening the doors to friends for a weekend celebration. They ended up arguing with police and angrily accepting a noise violation. A fraternity on the corner of Washtenaw Ave. and Hill Street had similar expectations for Friday night, and landed a similar fate. But Friday night was routine for the Ann Arbor Police Party Patrol - a quiet evening. "Last week (for the Michigan State football weekend) we had eight officers working and that probably wasn't enough," Staff Sgt. Dan Waites said Friday. "But our anticipation is that it's going to be very slow tonight." The patrol has already issued 48 violations to students hosting par- ties since classes began this year, police said, and an additional 111 official warnings have been given. Although no records have been kept in previous years, Waites said, these figures are about average. Waites, the patrol supervisor, met the four other officers working overtime hours on party patrol at 10:30 p.m. for briefing. They paired off into separate units - Victor unit 1 and Victor unit 2 - and re- ceived instructions for the assignment. "Make sure you get good detail of parties," Waites instructed. "If they are spilling out onto the side- walk, if there are open kegs, how many people are there? If they're being uncooperative ... that's when we close the parties down. That's the fun part." Waites asked officers to look for code violations, minors in posses- sion of alcohol, and people carrying open containers of alcohol. lie told them to use their own discretion when issuing violations "If you're going to close down a party, go ahead and call me down," he said. Three officers are usually necessary to close down a party. "There have only been three in- stances when we've needed more," he said, citing a party at 1920 Geddes as an example. The Friday and Saturday night party patrol was created six years ago to control the level of underage drinking and loud parties in re- sponse to complaints from neighbors. These officers earning "time and a half' wages drive around predom- inately student residential areas - like the area police call "Edward" area, between Stadium and Hill, from the railroad tracks to Washtenaw - looking for loud par- ties, and following up on com- plaints until about 2 a.m. The special unit patrols through See POLICE, Page 2 Ann Arbor police officers with the party patrol break up a house party Friday night. The police issued the students a noise violation. .Rape decision sparks concern by Marc Otender A Texas grand jury's September decision to not indict a man on rape charges because he agreed to use a condom during the assault raises se- rious questions about definitions of rape and consent, educators said. "Rape is any sexual activity that was done with coercion or against another person's will," said Debi * Cain, director of the U-M Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center. "There is no doubt in my mind that if this woman said she was raped, she was raped." Cain expressed her frustration with stereotypes of rape existing in the United States. "Our society still has some deeply-held beliefs and attitudes that are extremely victim-blaming. It's exactly this attitude that survivors encounter in the criminal justice sys- tem that keeps them from coming forward," Cain said. Anne Herrmann, director of the U-M Department of Women's Studies, said she tried to see the case from the jury's point of view. "The jury's assumption is - if she could have talked him into using a condom, she could have talked him out of raping her," Herrmann said. Herrmann stressed this does not mean the woman consented to hav- ing sex. "Consent would be not feeling that you're forced into the sexual act against your will," Herrmann said. "This has nothing to do with con- sent, it has do with fear. My reading of it would be that she was trying to protect herself. "Women don't believe they have the power to talk men out of rape," Herrmann said. "From her point of view, it was easier to talk him into using a condom." A rape survivor faces both imme- diate and long-term threats, said Susan Kauffman, associate director of the Center for the Education of Women. Cain said, "The primary issue for a rape survivor is pregnancy, and the possibility of being infected with HIV," she said. "This woman was threatened no differently than a woman being threatened with a gun. What this woman was doing was self-defense, not consent." Kauffman said that consent was misconstrued in this case. "Consent is saying yes in some fashion. It's not enough for people to say, 'But she didn't say no.' If ..nm.n fA nr.iav tI.ratennd *bnh College Dems help U-M prepare for Clintons' speeches by Hope Calati portant because it is the beginning of the final and Lauren Dermer stretch of the campaign. Daily Government Reporters "It's right at the end of the final debate and The Clinton-Gore advance team recruited it's the first major event for the final run," he the College Democrats this weekend to spread the word that Bill and Hillary are coming to town. "The Clinton people are counting on us to do most of the dirty work," said Steve Martin, College Democrats member and LSA senior. The Democratic presidential candidate and his wife are scheduled to address students from the steps of Rackham Auditorium at 10 p.m. tonight, following the final presidential debate at Michigan State University. In the event of inclement weather, the rally will be held at Crisler Arena. At both loca- tions, the rally will be open to the public with the exception of a small reserved area directly in front of the podium. Dan Friedenzohn, co-chair of the College Democrats, said the timing of the rally is im- said. More than 100 student volunteers signed up See CLINTONS, Page 2 Clitn expects to debatechdater YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) - Bill Clinton predicted yesterday that President Bush would launch fresh character attacks in their final debate and described the strategy as "really sad." The president and Ross Perot kept a low profile while preparing for tonight's See DEBATE, Page 2 Welcome wagon Students (left to right) Mary Ellen Sprenkel, Sarah Golohrter and Paul Cohan make banners to welcome Democratic candidate Bill Clinton to the U-M tomorrow. Symposium brings home hard facts of AIDS by Megan Lardner U-M students who got up early to attend the Inter Cooperative Council's AIDS Awareness Symposium Saturday had a rude awakening. The symposium provided infor- mation on safe sex and the history of AIDS and the HIV virus. Speakers and workshops stressed the message that no one is exempt from contracting the HIV virus, and a panel of HIV-positive speakers discussed their own experience with AIDS. "There's not a day that I'm not fighting people because of my dis- 'There's not a day that I'm not fighting people because of my disease.' - Tammy Boccomino symposium panelist ease," said panelist Tammy Boccomino. Boccomino discovered she was HIV-positive five years ago. She said people constantly refuse to al- low their children to play with her son - who contracted the HIV virus from her at birth. Another HIV-positive speaker' stated that one in 250 college stu- dents is infected with the HIV virus. Washtenaw County has the sec- ond-highest per capita incidence of AIDS in the state of Michigan, said U-M psychiatry Prof. David Ostrow. A Michigan Department of Public Health report stated .that an estimated 10,000 to 40,000 Michigan residents are infected with the virus that causes AIDS. Ostrow said every two years the reported number of AIDS cases doubles. Currently, there are approx- imately a quarter of a million re- ported AIDS cases in the United States. The main routes of transmission of the HIV virus are through sex, sharing intravenous needles, blood transfusions, and mother-to-infant fetal contact at time of birth. Teenagers and women are now the highest-risk groups and are dying of AIDS at increasing rates. Women are 17 times more likely than men to become infected by a one-time exposure to the virus. Steven Wood of the Mid-West AIDS Prevention Project discussed safer sex and rated the effectiveness of different FDA-approved con- doms. Gold Circle Coins rated first, followed by Lifestyles Extra Strength. Wood also stressed the impor- tance of using water-based preven- tative creams or foams containing nonoxynol-9 with condoms. Nonoxynol-9 destroys the HIV virus. The symposium panel recom- mended everyone be tested for the HIV virus. See AIDS, Page 7 .3 - Chinese government app roves successors BEIJING (AP) - The Communist Party, holding what is likely to be its last congress under paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, approved a new, slightly younger group of leaders yesterday that ex- cluded ranking hard-liners. The congress closed with a reso- lution praising Deng and endorsing his policy of adopting capitalist prac- tices to preserve Communist rule. Ri flanrc and a hnge hammer Deng and other revolutionaries who have dominated the party for more than a decade. But previous efforts at arranging a succession have failed, and there is no guarantee it will work this time. Deng did not attend the congress, but was its dominant force. He and the other party elders scripted it be- forehand, choosing the candidates for the Central Committee. The state-run Xinhua News SNRE allies with Law, Business Schools by Gwen Shaffer Daily Environment Reporter The School of Natural Resources and Environment (SNRE) is broad- ening its focus with a new dean, stronger ties to other U-M schools and colleges, and a new name. I - -' I