Weather Tonight: Cloudy, chance of flurries, low around O. Tomorrow: Chance of flurries, high around 20-. WE6 Unt One hundredfive years ofeditorialfreedom Tuesday January 30, 1996 Af Arbon Mchiga Lansing set to vo on inces statutes Two Michigan cas trigger new bill By Stephanie Jo Klein IDaily Staff Reporter Michigan's state House is se today to amend state sexual statutes, a move that may make cest illegal. Sponsored by state Rep. Clyde (R-Horton), the bill would am Michigan Penal Code to crimina sensual incest between people o 16 years, withpossiblepunishm to 10 years in prison and a $2,0 Prior to 1975, incest was illel state regardless of the ages of d volved, LeTarte said. When the juvenile code was ted, only incest with relatives years prohibi The Bill "It'o The bill proposes to: whethi M inimalize provis consensual incest intenti between people inadv older than 16 years, q m i with possible LeTarb punishment of up to Stag Syears in prison Laura d a $2,004 fine (D-0 said th was 1 back to public attention follow "notorious" cases in Holly and H County. In the Holly case, a father a impregnated his three daughte than a dozen times without leg ties. The man was later convictedo *young granddaughter. In Hillsdale, a man fathered ei dren with his daughter, who was old when she gave birth to their l In both cases, the incestual o had severe birth defects and sev~ State agencies looked into t and studied the impact ofcoerci older family member, Baird sa Under the new bill, a person i G it incest by an authorit ild be able to use coercion a te t studS vrus trio Lom"IeS AIDS viru es t to vote conduct all forms LeTarte nend the lize con- Ider than entofup 000 fine. gal in the those in- restruc- under 16 old was ited. sunclear her (the ion) was onally or ertently tted," te said. ate Rep. a Baird kemos) the issue brought iing two Hillsdale allegedly ers more al penal- ofraping ight chil- 27 years ast child. ffspring eral died. he cases on by an id. forced to y figure as a legal The Washington Post WASHINGTON -- A potent com- bination of three drugs - two already on the market and a new experimental product - suppresses the virus that causes AIDS below detectable levels, researchers said yesterday. The new treatment is not a cure for AIDS, and the findings involve a small number of patients over a short span of time. But if the therapy proves as effec- tive as the preliminary results indicate, the trio of drugs may be a major step toward rendering AIDS a treatable, chronic illness - a longtime goal of those battling the disease. "We're seeing something that we've never seen before," said Emilio Emini, executive director ofanti-viral research at pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co., which manufactures the experimental drug, indinavir. Emini discussed the research in a speech at the third annual Conference on Retroviruses and Op- portunistic Infections here. Full details of the three-drug trial, which also in- volved the established medicines AZT and 3TC, will be disclosed in a presen- tation Thursday. Indinavir is one of a promising new class ofanti-AIDS drugs known as "pro- 3-Drug Combination Of the 26 AIDS patients in the experiment who received all three drugs, 24 had fewer than 500 virus particles per millimeter of blood. tease inhibitors" that work by blocking the production of an enzyme crucial to the reproductive cycle of the AIDS vi- rus. These drugs work on a different stage of the reproductive cycle than the first drugs approved for treating AIDS, known as nucleoside analogs. Anthony Fauci, director of the Na- tional Institute of Allergy and Infec- tious Diseases, warned that the AIDS research community has gotten its hopes up many times in the past about treat- ments that ultimately did not pan out. Larger studies conducted over a longer span of time will show whether the treatment is effective, and whether it might prove toxic in long-term use, Fauci said. See AIDS, Page 2 On pins and needles Mark Waner, a member of Michigan State University's Science Theatre, is sandwiched in a bed of nails at the Ann Arbor Hands On Museum as part of Family Physics Night. Waner's feat demonstrated the principles behind a physics theory of the dispersion of weight. Navy jet crashes near Nashvile kh 5 people -77 Records show pilot was blamed in crash last April defense. " Opposition to the bill is not expected. "The pro-incest group has been kind of quiet," LeTarte said wryly. Unanimously approved last week by the House Judiciary and Civil Rights Committee, the bill still needs Senate approval to become law. Soon after it is put on the legislative agenda next month, Baird said, the Sen- *will likely approve the bill. It's not controversial," Baird said. The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Five people died yes- terday when a Navy F-14A "Tomcat" fighter jet, piloted by an aviator who had crashed another jet into the sea last year, plunged into a subprb near the Nashville International Air- port while on a routine training flight, Navy officials said. Witnesses said the plane, which had just taken off from a nearby military airfield, burst into a huge fire ball upon impact, engulfing three homes. The dead included an elderly couple and a man visiting them in one of the houses, and the plane's two-man crew. The crash was the fourth in 15 months involving F-14As from the same squadron, Fighting Squadron 213, known as the "Fight- ing Blacklions." The pilot involved in yesteday's crash, Lt. Cmdr. John Stacy Bates, 33, was blamed in a crash last April, which occurred when he lost control of his Tomcat while doing what were determined to be un- necessary banking maneuvers over the Pa- cific, west of Hawaii, according to military sources familiar with the incident. In September, an F-14A from the squad- ron went down off the Philippines coast. Both crew members ejected safety. In Octo- ber 1994 another squadron member, Kara Hultgreen, one of first two women in combat flight training, died when her Tomcat crashed into the Pacific as she attempted to land aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier. Investigators attributed her crash to a combination of mechanical error and pilot handling. Following yesterday's crash, a spokesper- son at the Naval Air Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet said the commander had ordered a "stand down" of all squadron members to review the group's safety record and to go over safety procedures. The squadron includes 14 aircraft. The Navy has lost 30 F-14 fighter jets to crashes since 1991 but insisted yesterday that the plane's overall mishap rate since 1981 was no greater than any of its other tactical aircraft.- "There is nothing inherently unsafe about the F-14 engines," said Navy spokesperson Cmdr. Steven Pietropaoli. Aviators have com- plained for years that the engines are not pow- erful enough to suit their needs. The Navy is in the process of upgrading them. In addition to Bates, of Chattanooga, Tenn., the plane's radar operator, Lt. Graham Alden Higgins, 28, of Dover-Foxcroft, Maine, was killed. The couple inside the house were iden- tified by Nashville police as Elmer Newsom, 66, and his wife, Ada, 63. Police said the man visiting them, who also was killed, had not yet been identified. Christie Massrock, a neighbor of the Newsom's, told Reuter news agency that people were "banging on the (Newsoms') door" after the crash. "There was an explosion" inside, she said. AP PHOTO Rescue workers coordinate their efforts to stop flames from spreading in the aftermath of an F-14A fighter jet crash yesterday In Nashville. The plane went down in a residential area shortly after taking off during a training mission. Di Pont search turns up gun WEDIA, Pa. (AP) - Police who feared they would find trip wires and plastic explosives discovered only a few weapons yesterday when they searched John du Pont's estate, including the gun they believe he used to kill an Olympic wrestler. Officers were testing a .38-caliber revolver to confirm that it was the murder, weapon, said district attorney Patrick Meehan. "We turned up a few weapons but we only looked at those we considered vital to the commission ofthe crime," Meehan said. Du Pont, an heir to his family's chemi- cal company fortune, had stymied po- lice for 48 hours after he allegedly shot 1984 gold medalist Dave Schultz, who du Pont was training there in hopes of making this year's Olympic team. The standoff ended Sunday when du Pont stepped outside his mansion in Newtown Square to try to fix his boiler and was grabbed by police, who had turned off the heat. Du Pont, 57, was arraigned on murder and weapons *rges and held without bond pending a hearing Thursday. Police feared du Pont, a military buff who was reputed to have a large cache of weapons, had booby-trapped the mansion while he was barricaded inside. An explosives team went in first and found nothing, Meehan said. Meehan refused to discuss a motive for the shooting. Acnaintances and relatives said du Pont abused drugs and Walker heralds merits of integrating computers, art By Debbie Frank For the Daily Do today's digitalized cameras, computer images, animation and virtual reality make up a new form of art? Painter and curator James Walker addressed this ques- tion and others last night in his lecture on the integration of art and computers. "My hunch is that certain types of people - by no means all of them techy nerds, computer art professors, (or) refugees from the art world - have been drawn into the electronic debate," Walker " lr§Amk mAmAft : said. EWVAIUfI More than 100 students and i. professors interested in the new IS itself a D wave of electronic art filled the, Art and Architecture Audito- rium to hear Walker last night. -Ja He used the lecture to discuss Painter his own work and to explain his new exhibition, "Cool Heaven." In the lecture, Walker outlined the differences be- tween the electronic and contemporary art worlds. "Electronic art is itself a new adventure, not yet split by the factionalism, the competitiveness, the vanity that gives the artworld salons their undertow." School of Art and Architecture professors say the 11 m ra Walker discussed the unique graphic work of artists from around the world. He presented slides depicting different kinds of graphic art and ideas from Australia, the United States and England. Walker also used the slide show to demonstrate the differences between physical paintings and computer images. "I'm not quite sure what I think of the art work, but I know he's genuine and relaxed about the creative pro- cess," said Jamy Sheridan, an assistant professor of computer art. "I found the lecture unusually instructive and quite 1C a t interesting." A founder ofArtscribe Magazine and ew its editor for eight years, Walker left his position there to further explore the electronic art world. nes Walker Art school senior Jani Anderson, who and curator said he is interested in digitalized art, said he enjoyed Walker's presentation. "I appreciate the freedom of Walker's art," Anderson said. "He has a fresh and wide-eyed view on art." Audience members were impressed with Walker's humor and wit. "I liked the talk and the way he spoke as a person better than his work," said Mike Garvi, an Art school senior. I I1 SARA STILLMAN/Daily v