riru UnRR F 4 1 :4 1 til Weather ronight: Increasing cloudi- ess; low around 320. omorrow: Mostly cloudy, higi round 65°. h One hundred six years of editori dfeedom Tuesday October 15, 1996 U'to 4th sexua,.l asault reported inA have its city cout Regents to confront legal action today at 11 a.m. By Jeff Eldridge Dly Staff Reporter ile students prepare for midterms, the administration is preparing for court. The University Board of Regents will confront a legal action today at 11 a.m. before circuit court Judge Melinda Morris. The board is currently under a temporary restraining order for alleged- ly violating state open meetings laws in its presidential search plans. Administration attornies will seek to have the injunction removed. e suit was brought collectively by The Ann Arbor News, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News. It argues that the University is in violation of both a permanent injunction and the state's Open Meetings Act. University officials hope to prove their case. "We're going to go to court and ask the judge to lift the temporary restrain- in order," said Wlter Harrison, vice sident for University relations. "We hope we will succeed in that.' Harrison would not speculate how long it will take for the lawsuit to go through court or what the University's next action will be if its request is denied. Joan Lowenstein, an Ann Arbor attor- ney who specializes in media law, said today's hearing could be the start of a larger round of legal activity. Lowenstein i the plaintiffs will likely request a liminary injunction to indefinitely halt the University's search plans. Currently, the University faces a tem- porary injunction that will expire after Tuesday's hearing. But if Morris denies the preliminary injunction, all participants will face a full-blown trial to determine whether the search will be put under a permanent injunction. f If (Morris) grants the injunction .. t en the University would be really silly to pursue it," Lowenstein said, citing the Michigan Supreme Court's 1993 deci- sion against the board of regents for conducting the previous search in secret. Jonathan Rowe, attorney for the newspapers, said he would not rule out the possibility of an out-of-court settle- ment. "We are always amenable to discuss compromise and resolution with the -iversity," Rowe said. "I wouldn't want to speculate otherwise." Until a legal conclusion is reached, the current presidential search has been derailed. Regents met in a closed session yes- terday to discuss legal strategy with their attorneys. Harrison would not comment on what University attorneys intend to say in art this morning. He said some partic- ts may be asked to testify. "In these things, most of the action is between attornies, but there certainly is the possibility of testimony," Harrison See COURT, Page 5 By Anupama Reddy Daily Staff Reporter A fourth sexual assault in 10 days was reported to local authorities after a woman was raped and robbed at gun- point early Sunday morning on West Stadium Boulevard. Ann Arbor Police Department Sgt. Phillip Scheel said he did not yet know if this recent incident was related to last Tuesday's assault at the Nob Hill apart- ment complex. "It's too early to tell at this point," Scheel said. Scheel said AAPD and Southfield Police Department detectives met last Thursday and Friday, but did not find any similarities between the Nob Hill Officials claim there is no trend case and a sexual assault that occurred last week in Southfield. "They'll keep in touch," Scheel said. "I don't think that you could consider it a joint investigation at this time." In the latest incident, the woman, manager of the Subway store at 2410 W Stadium Blvd., had opened the back door of the store at 3:21 a.m. Sunday, when she was confronted by a man with a handgun. According to AAPD reports, the man asked her for money from the store's safe. She was unable to open the safe, so the suspect allegedly took the vic- tim's money, wallet and credit cards. Then, the man forced her under gun- point up a nearby hill, and raped her, according to AAPD reports. The suspect is described as 5-foot-8 and in his mid-20s. The medium-built man has a dark complexion and was last seen wearing dark sweatpants, a hooded sweatshirt and a bandana, according to AAPD reports. Joyce Wright, prevention and educa- tion coordinator for the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, said last week that there are different rea- sons why more sexual assaults are reported, including an increased aware- ness of where to report the assaults. "It's very hard to tell," Wright said. "People come forward for a variety of reasons." LSA sophomore Iris Chien said she agrees that the actual number of assaults may not be increasing, but that people may be reporting them more. "I think it's always been occurring," Chien said. "I don't know if people are reporting it more now." Engineering sophomore Kirsten Kresnac said she thinks sexual assaults are part of campus life, and the recent assaults are not connected. "I know it's a problem with campus- es," Kresnac said. "I don't think (it's a trend)" LSA sophomore Byron Kaufman said he thinks the recent assaults may be related. "Four times - of course it's a trend, especially with robbery involved," Kaufinan said. "Maybe robbery was the focus, but it changed its nature." Police are still searching for the suspect in the assault at Nob Hill Apartments that occurred last Tuesday afternoon. Final pres. deate to - cJR ISTEN SCHAEFER/Daily The great pumpkin Five-year-old Bernadette Milotevens picks out a perfect pumpkin at Wiard's Orchards pumpkin patch, located off Carpenter Road. With the upcoming Halloween season, local kids and parents have been flocking to the orchard for apples, pumpkins and a haunted house. Parties split on pans for hgher ed. air tonight WASHINGTON (AP) - No more Mr. Nice Guy Jim Lehrer tossing those respectful let-us-reason-together ques- tions. At tomorrow's second and final pres- idential debate, the questioners will be ordinary San Diego residents, screened by the Gallup organization to represent everyone but hard-core supporters of President Clinton or Bob Dole, PBS newscaster Lehrer has taken some heat from commentators for being bland and, as one critic wrote, "fair minded to a fault" while moderat- ing the first presidential debate and the vice presidential forum. A town-hall-style debate four years ago between President Bush and Clinton, his Democratic challenger, showed the dangers to the candidates of letting citizens take charge. While the ques- tions can reflect what is on the pub- lic's mind, they also can come from far afield or be downright mys- tifying. In the 1992 evening's third Dole question consisted of a citizen's lecture that disarmed Bush, who had been intent on portraying Clinton as ethical- ly unfit for the presidency. The questioner deplored "the amount of time the candidates have spent in this campaign trashing their opponents' character and their pro- grams." Bush was left floundering a second time by a question in which the candi- dates were asked how "the national debt personally affected each of your lives." The president wound up saying one didn't need to have cancer to discuss the impact of cancer. Clinton turned the question into a more general inquiry about the economy and talked about "people that have lost their jobs, lost their livelihood, lost their health insur- ance." The questioner, Marisa Hall, com- mented later that Bush was wishy washy" while Clinton did "a pretty good job. That debate - like Wednesday's - was character- ized as the Republican can- didate's last best chance to catch Clinton up with his Democratic rival. If Dole intends to raise character questions, as advertised, he'd better hope the audience gives him the open- ing, said Wayne Fields, a Washington University professor who has written a book on presidential speechmaking. Dole would look obvious twisting a question on another topic into a discus- sion of Clinton's flaws, he said. "If the audience asks hard questions of Clinton, that's fine," Fields said. "Dole has to hope that's what happens. If he raises the hard questions, it's just not likely to work in this format' By Jennifer Harvey Daily Staff Reporter When it comes to their plans for edu- cation, Republicans and Democrats point one finger of blame at their oppo- nents and one of credit at their own records. Both parties say they want high-qual- ity, low-cost higher education for as many Americans as possible. They just don't agree about how to get it. Many Democrats say President Clinton is the strongest education pres- ident ever and warn that Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole will reverse many of Clinton's strides. "Bob Dole and Newt Gingrich have, over the past two years, led what many consider to be the most anti-educa- tion Congress in history," said Sen. Christopher Doddw (D-Conn.), chair of the Democratic N a t i o n a l Committee. But Republicans say Democrats' attacks on their' education record are unfounded. "It's a phony charge and a red herring for Democrats to say that Republicans are a threat to education:' said Rusty Hills, director of public relations for Gov. John Engler, a Republican. Often, Democrats tell younger voters that Dole, if elect- ed, will attack student loans and other education programs. They say the BS Republican for programs that, in turn, fund Pell grants, work-study programs, student loans and the AmenCorps program. Clinton's veto pen, Dodd said, is the only thing that kept education programs intact during the last two years, with a Republican majority in both the House and Senate. Republicans flatly deny hoisting an attack on student loans. "Republicans are increasing student loans but not at the rate Democrats want them to:" said Nicholas Kirk, president of the campus College Republicans and an *LSA junior. "Republicans are not taking away stu- dent loans?' See EDUCATION, Page 5 a. 6 In a 12-part serh record shows a history of attacks on education. Dodd said Republicans have pro- posed more than $10 billion in higher education cuts in the last two years. He said Republicans intend to cut funding 1 Pieces of sculpture put together in U' museum By Bram Elias Daily Staff Reporter Talk about a pain in the neck. The reunited head and torso of a sculpture of a Roman soldier are on display, along with other artifacts, in an exhibition at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology titled "Images of Empire: Flavian agments in Rome and Ann Arbor Rejoined." The exhibition, which opened Oct. 5 and will run until Feb. 17, brings together 15 fragments of Roman relief sculpture that have been dispersed between the collections of the Kelsey Museum and the Museo Nazional Romano in Rome, Italy. "This is one of the more exciting shows we've ology at the University, and Paul Hartwig, a German scholar, acquired a number of sculpture fragments, now identified as "Flavian fragments?' which had just been found in a construction site in Rome. Kelsey purchased six pieces for University museums, and Hartwig bought nine pieces and donated them to Museo Nazional Romano. Kelsey and Hartwig were entirely unaware of each other's actions. Seventy-seven years later, in 1978, an archaeolo- gist at the University of North Carolina realized that the head of a Roman soldier in Rome seemed to match the body of a Roman soldier in Ann Arbor. "We weren't sure until Rome sent us a cast of I ® 4 .. °....#k G4. ci c:. , ,:. .: iu s". "{ ua" ,u, ..t.3 ='X .. _ Mrs..{. ... ' ' AMDa ?M ffl f' ' x5'xxY.