C *MF Unti 76-DAILY ising: 764-0554 One hundred seven years of editorialfreedom Tuesday November 11, 1997 'Dto change )illing methods Student assaulted at Arb y Sam Stavis aily Staff Reporter in an attempt to simplify the compli- ated computing system at the Iniversity, the Information Technology 'ivision is changing its method of pro- iding computing services to students, aff and faculty. Ling in January, ITD will provide 1I users with a comprehensive package that will New lTD cover basic computing Package n e e d s, including e- E-mail: Includes up mail, IFS to,three megabytes file storage, f storage for d i a l - i n messages access and .Laser printing: Up laser print- c&0 pages per ing. For tmf at Campus more than a Computing Sites year, ITD D Diain access: Up has given to 80 hours per term users $10 a through MichNet month to Etile storage: Up to . spend on ive megabytes of ITD com- IFS storage space puting ser- per termpuigsr Web access: vices of their ' 'r U and Usenet choice. "We are trying to mplify the process by which users get iese services," said Ruth Addis, man- ,er for production and support for rD. "We are letting people do their 'ork, which is researching, teaching 1d learning, instead of doing our ork, which is providing technology." Under the new system, if a user ceeds the limit of what is provided by edsic computing package, the addi- onal services are billed directly to the ser's account. This billing system solves one of the lost serious problems with the old sys- im, ITD officials said. Previously, sers could be cut off from basic ser- ices if they ran out of money in their PD accounts. This became a problem for LSA >phomore Andy Cho, who was denied r rvices because he had used up is $10 allocation. 641 print out like crazy,' Cho said. "it as a problem at the end of last year" To regain use of cancelled lTD ser- ices for that month, users would have visit an ITD office and deposit a ieck in their account. "Everybody wound up with more ork to do," said Laurie Burns, ITD See ITD, Page 2 Judgefrees Bnglis By Stephanie Hepburn Daily Staff Reporter A 21-year-old student was sexually assaulted Sunday evening at Nichols Arboretum after a lone male perpetrator threatened her with a knife. The woman spent the night in the hospital due to injuries she received in the 8 p.m. attack. Department of Public Safety spokesperson Elizabeth Hall said she was unable to comment about the case's specifics because the incident is under investigation. DPS classified the incident as a first-degree sexual assault, which requires some sort of penetration. The student spent the entire night at the hospital due to injuries, none of which were inflicted by the man's knife. "She only received a small superficial cut that may have come from the knife," Hall said. The perpetrator, who DPS officials said could still be in the area, was last seen on foot. The perpetrator is a white male with a medium complexion, DPS reports state. The man is described as approximately 30 years old and between 5-foot-6 and 5- foot-9 with a medium build, and light col- ored hair. He was not wearing glasses and did not have facial hair. He was wearing a red-and-black checkered heavy shirt or coat, blue jeans and a watch on his left wrist. Hall said the arboretum is not a particularly dangerous area, adding that only two criminal sexual conducts have been reported to DPS since the campus police force's inception. "In 1989, there was a fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct," Hall said. "In December of 1990, there was a first-degree criminal sexual conduct" First- and third-degree sexual assault requires penetration of some kind. Second- and fourth- degree involve sexual contact. The arboretum is a beat area for DPS offi- cers, with patrols regularly going through the premises. A blue emergency button and strobe lights also are located by the stairs near the Huron River in the Arb. Hall said that DPS is "very concerned when this happens to a member in the community." "We will take whatever steps it takes to help and to do whatever we can to prevent this type of thing from happening again," she said. Despite patrol and precautions, this incident has brought to the forefront the danger that such assaults can occur anywhere on campus, said leaders of the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center. SAPAC advises students who have been sex- ually assaulted after they contact SA PAC coun- selors or call the crisis hotline. See ASSAULT, Page 2 Sexual assault prevention techniques Be aware of your surroundings, of where you are and who is with you. Stay alert to what is happening around you, whether you are at home, at a friend's houseor on the street. Lock your car and house doors. U Believe that you never deserve to be raped. You have the right to say "no" to a date, lover, spouse or any- one. 9 Practice punching, running, yelling and other ways to fight off, an attacker. Imagine how you would success- fully resist being raped. This will help prepare you to fight off an attacker. * For more information; call the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center at 936- 3333, or the Asslult Crisis Center at 482-7273. Source: Assault Cnsis Center The aftermath _> a 7 tThv- Sleaders discuss lawsuit By Janet Adamy and Jeffrey Kosseff )aily Staff Reporters Student leaders from opposite ends of campus and the political spectrum shared surprisingly similar views on equality and diversity during a round- table discussion held at the Michigan Daily on Sunday. The roundtable forum was an oppor- tunity for students to voice their opin- ions on the lawsuit filed last month that challenges the use of affirmative action in the University's admissions process. Although the 10 student leaders from various campus organizations had dif- fering opinions on whether affirmative action is the correct means by. which to achieve diversity, all agreed that society has not reached equality among the races. "We need to have these ... measures in place to combat the injustice that's taken place in the past," said Lauren Shubow, president of the LSA Student Government. While the students' views onaffir- mative action differed widely, most agreed the lawsuit was unavoidable. "It was inevitable," said Michigan Student Assembly Rep. David Burden, adding that he would prefer the issue of affirmative action to be dealt with by voter referendum similar to California's Proposition 209. "It's a debate that's been brewing for a long time. Even some adamant opponents of the case that challenges the University's affirmative action programs said the lawsuit could have some benefits. "To have it happen here, we have a chance to turn it around," said Jessica Curtin, a member of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary (BAMN), pointing out the large presence of minorities in the Metro Detroit area. "They made a big mistake by choosing Michigan." Mark Potts, president of the campus chapter of the College Republicans, said the lawsuit will give the University a chance to review its admissions pro- cedures. "We shouldn't let our policies go unchallenged for a long period of time" Potts said. "Win or lose, I think this is good whatever the consensus." See ROUNDTABLE, Page 7 DAN CASTLE/Daily A carpet cleaner's truck sits outside University President Lee Bollinger's house yesterday morning, two days after Bollinger invited more than 1,000 students into his house to celebrate the Michigan football team's victory over Penn State. Colleges compare community relations By Peter Meyers Daily Staff Reporter Two U.S. college towns are getting together to discuss American college town problems. A delegation of 105 representatives from Chapel Hill's city government, business community and the University of North Carolina will be in town through tomorrow to talk with repre- sentatives from the Ann Arbor City Council, local leaders and the University. University Director of Community Relations Jim Kosteva said the expe- dition has been in the works for two years. One reason the event took so long to get here was shifting leader- ship at both universities, Kosteva said. In the past two years, the University acquired a new president, and UNC chose a new chancellor. Kosteva said that despite the flux of personnel, the original goals of the con- ference should not be affected. "City and University cooperation is at its heart," Kosteva said. "Wound through the entire three-day dialogue will be discussion of the city-university relationship." The Chapel Hill community delega- tion has made seven trips to other uni- versity towns over the past decade, Kosteva said. Past destinations have included Lexington, Ky., Boulder, Col., and Palo Alto, Calif. "City and university cooperation is at its heart.3" - Jim Kosteva University director community relations anny SMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - A dge reduced Louise Woodward's uxder conviction to manslaughter nd set the English au pair free yester- ay in hopes of bringing "a compas- ionate conclusion" to a case that hone a spotlight on everything from vorking moms to the American legal ystem. As the world watched, Judge Hiller o sentenced Woodward to the 279 a served since her arrest last ebruary in the death of 8-month-old datthew Eappen. The round-faced 19-year-old showed o reaction in court. Her lawyers said he would have no comment. Hours earlier, the judge ruled that he killed the baby by shaking him vio- ently but that her actions did not con- titute second-degree -murder because h id not act with malice. Second- ee murder carries a mandatory entence of life in prison with the pcs- ibility of parole after 15 years. "In selecting the sentence here I do ot denigrate Matthew Eappen's death or his family's grief," Zobel said. But e added: "It is, in my judgment, time bring the judicial part of this extraor- Kosteva said this year's fact-find- ing mission will be a chance for the Chapel Hill community to learn about Ann Arbor's ways of doing things, but that the Ann Arbor hosts would also get ample opportunity to learn from their visiting counter- parts. The most prominent impetus for this meeting is a 1,000-acre gift of Chapel Hill land to the University of North Carolina. The land lies on the opposite end of town from the present day cam- pus. "It may be a situation akin to our North Campus about 30 years ago,' Kosteva said. "I think we have lessons we can share." UNC also is interested in building a. new venue for the performing arts sim- ilar to the University's Power Center. The University is also planning the construction of another hall of this sort. Susan Pollay, executive director of the Ann Arbor Downtown Development Authority, said city and University officials are debating where to put the University's new hall. "It could be on campus, nestled into the Frieze building," Pollay said. "Or it could be on North Campus, to try to get more people up there." The hall could even be built off-campus, she said. The two other major issues that helped prompt the delegationĀ§ visit are matters of sustainability and transporta- See UNC, Page 7 'U' students teach literature to prisoners By Stephanie Hepburn Daily Staff Reporter Surrounded by barbed wire, Western Wayne Prison stands alone and quiet as four women stu- dents laden with pens, paper, sonnets by Shakespeare and the Norton Anthology of Poetry approach the prison to teach their weekly creative writing class. These students, who are enrolled in the Project Community LSA class, work with inmates at various local institutions, including the Washtenaw County Juvenile Detention Center, Adrian County Jail and Western Wayne Prison. The program is designed to heighten the inmates' interest in education, while giv- ing them a chance to express their emotions. Inmates participate in activities that include cre- ative writing workshops and instruction in job- "We talk about emotional and personal things," Defor said. "Our debates are usually emotionally charged. The fact that they are ex-cons gives them a different perspective. The workshops give you an opportunity to meet people you wouldn't normally meet." Inmates "really appreciate any learning struc- ture," Defor added. Mary Wright, a GSI for most of the Project Community sections, said many students who par- ticipate in the workshops are interested in a criminal justice career. "Students are introduced to the criminal justice system in a practical way," Wright said. "The workshops give students a chance to apply socio- logical theories about crime through readings and experience together. Working with prisoners, they LPNJE