i t ,.v 444hp tit! News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 764-0554 One hundred six years ofeditor alfteedom Thursday February 6, 1997 c~ sA ?.« faz Poet, activist talks about ,exeriences with AIDS By Brian Campbell Daily Staff Reporter Poet River Huston dazzled the audience gathered at the Michigan Union Ballroom last night with her vivacity and humor as she relat- the sobering stories of her experience as a person living with AIDS. Huston, an AIDS activist, gave her speech as part of the University's AIDS Awareness Week. While Huston's exuberance suggested her relative good health, she said she had been feeling sick lately and that her presence last night stemmed from her continued dedication to fight the spread of the disease. "I love life, but I'm dealing with an * unbearable situa- areiSS tion," she said. Febr ary 1-8 Week "There's one reason why I'm here, and that's because HIV is still here, AIDS is still here, it's going on, and you're at risk:" Huston expressed frustration at the failure of drugs like AZT artd protease inhibitors to provide an effective treatment for the disease, but said she's found solace in talking with ther women who have HIV/AIDS. Huston entioned one-HIV-infected woman who was having difficulty discussing the disease with her children. "The thing is, if you have HIV, whether you look good or bad, you're still sick," Huston said. "It's hard to explain this to children." LSA junior Lareena Thepveera said she was struck by Huston's candor. "I think she is very honest and has a lot to say" Thepveera said. "She has shock value and she also has a message. She makes you listen" Huston said she felt "like giving up" earlier this year after being arrested for obscenity in New Jersey while demonstrating safer sex 'U' ordered tc pay legal fees from trial loss 1 1 By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter Mounting bills for last fall's presidential search grew even higher yesterday after Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Melinda Morris rescinded a decision that previously favored the University. Morris ordered the University to pay the $27,495 in the plantiff's attorney fees accrued in a lawsuit initiated by The Ann Arbor News, Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News last October. Lisa Baker, associate vice president for University relations. "We will have to study the ruling," she said. Dawn Phillips, an attorney for the Michigan Press Association, called the ruling a victory for the newspapers, but predicted that presidential searches would still be marred by lawsuits. "It always offended me that the Board of Regents would spend public money on attorney fees to keep the public from viewing the selection of a public University president - and to risk the expenditure "It is clear that the motion filed by the plaintiff for fees was made within a reasonable time period after the court's order of dis- missal," the ruling stated. "The Court finds that a pal- pable error has been made and that a different disposi- tion of Plaintiffs' Motion for Attorney Fees must result " The three newspapers alleged that the University Board of Regents was about to "We are surprised and we will have to study the ruling," - Lisa Baker University spokesperson of additional money to spend newspapers' fees if they were wrong," Phillips said. Morris' ruling is part of the dwindling residue left after the University's yearlong search for its 12th president. The search, which concluded in November with the selection of Lee Bollinger, led to amend- ments of the Open JEANNIE SERVAAS/Daily Poet and activist River Huston talks with students before speaking last night about her experi- ences living with AIDS. Huston spoke as part of AIDS Awareness Week. violate the state's practices to high school students. Huston lamented what she considered a sexually repressed society, and said that a lack of frank discussion about safer sex is harmful to young people who need to know how to avoid the disease. "We don't have a forum for discussion. If we had a forum and an open society you would be able to talk to your parents about sexuality," Huston said. "I'm not advising you to go out and have sex, but whether we like it or not, we are sexual beings. We have hormones." Huston discussed condoms and dental dams and did a group activity in which she encour- aged the audience to ask each other sexually explicit questions from a list she prepared. Nursing first-year student Abbey Sikkenga said Huston's speech had a profound effect. "Her speech makes me question my beliefs and the way I was raised," Sikkenga said. "It gives me a different perspective for my life." AIDS is the No. 1 killer of people between the ages of 25 and 44 in the United States, according to literature given at the speech. Open Meetings Act by discussing potential candi- dates for University president behind closed doors and having one-on-one meetings with candidates. Morris originally denied the newspapers' January request to have their fees paid, calling the motion "untimely," because she ruled that their requset was not filed within the time allotted after her October decision barring the University from conducting the search in closed sessions. But in an opinion given. last week, Morris acknowledged that she had erred in her original rul- ing. The decision was delivered as a result of a plantiff motion for reconsideration. The ruling took the University by surprise, said Meetings Act last month. The state legislature approved bills exempting certain materials from being subject to the state's Freedom of Information Act and requiring a 30-day waiting period prior to a final presidential selection. Two days ago, expenditures for the entire search process were released, reporting that the University spent $500,000 during the search, making it the most expensive search in University history. This figure was more than five times the amount spent on the search for former University President James Duderstadt, which cost the University $90,600 in 1987. Half the 1996 expenditures were spent on legal fees alone. Reported rapes on campus higher than national rate By Jenni Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter The rate of rape among women 0 tionwide has dropped 10 percent nce 1990, according to a Department of Justice report released Sunday. But contrary to the national statis- tics, the University has seen an all-time high this year in rape reports. "While the numbers are lower, I'm not sure if that gives the number of actual cases out there," said Joyce Wright, prevention and education coordinator with the University's xual Assault Prevention and wareness Center. "In the last few years, people have been more reluctant to come forward. The numbers are still relatively high here at U of M." Wright attributes the reported rape increase to the general increase in crime, including murders, assaults and robberies. "(SAPAC) has been in existence for ten years and since the last academic ear, this is the highest number of ses we've seen coming through the door," Wright said. A Bureau of Justice Statistics spokesperson said the national statis- tics on the rate of rape came from the National Crime Victim Survey. "It's the second-largest house. sur- vey in the country," he said. "We go to 39,000 households and talk to 100,000 residents." The report, "Sex Offenses and Rape Statistics: The Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics released a report Sunday that states: Rape rates have decreased nationwide by 10 percent since 1990. * 97,000 rapes were reported in 1995, the lowest since 1985. Offenders," compiled more than two dozen statistics programs main- tained by the Bureau of Justice Statistics. It is the first national esti- mate of the amount of convicted sex offenders under the jurisdiction of federal, state and local correctional authorities. "There is nothing unusual in these surveys, they do them all the time," Wright said. "On one hand, in the 10- year period rapes have decreased, the number of rapists have gone up." The report states that 97,000 rapes were reported to law enforcement agencies in 1995, the lowest per capita since 1985. While BJS doesn't comment on the significance of their findings, University members are skeptical about the drop. LSA junior Anne Kelterborn said that even if the number of reported rapes has gone down, the incidents themselves haven't slowed. See RAPE, Page 5A NWROC hails verdict By Ericka M. Smith Daily St aff Reporter The aftermath of a discrimination suit won against the University on Tuesday led to picketing and protesting yes- terday by the three victorious plaintiffs and members of the National Women's Rights Organizing Coalition. Dawn Mitchell, Delano Isabell and Theresa Atkins sued the University and Dental School supervisor Linda Vachon DeMarco on charges of discrimination in a 1995 firing. Six Washtenaw County jurors found the University guilty, but exonerated DeMarco after a weeklong civil trial. Members of NWROC, who supported the three plaintiffs throughout the case, rallied on the Diag yesterday, passing out fliers announcing the jury's verdict. Visiting sociology Prof. Tom Lough, who observed the rally, said racism is a part of everything at universities. "I think it's structured into hiring, firing, admissions, tenure - everything," Lough said. After several minutes of distributing fliers and attempt- ing to gain students' attention, NWROC members marched See NWROC, Page 5A JEANNIE SERVAAS/Daily Alex Johnson of NWROC leads a march from the Dental School to the Diag yesterday to mark a Tuesday court victory in the trial of three former black Dental School employees against the University. NPR show to air on campus, today A surge of spirit L By Sam England For the Daily According to National Public Radio's Ray Suarez, broadcasting a radio show from a new location is no simple task. "It's something we only do a couple of times a year. It's very demanding technically, it's costly, so we don't do it too often," Suarez said Tuesday from his Washington, D.C. office. So why is he bringing "Talk of the Nation,' the show he hosts, to the Rackham Auditorium this afternoon - the first visit ever to a college or uni- versity campus? Despite the logistical difficulties, and listeners can call the show toll- free. Suarez and event organizers hope the free event will attract a broad range of people. Ramadan endr Sunday The monthlong Muslim holiday, which includes fasting and daily r ( R "We like to go where people are and do a program. That's self-evi- dent," Suarez said. "You don't want to travel a couple of hundred miles to speak to a half- empty room. We want energy and interest, and away- from-the-script I ,I ,;I I I j. ,f. } 4 a .r {u. mNL^ 11 I