-- - LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 10, 1999 - 3 IGHER EDUCATION Northwestern student fights to express himself Northwestern University student's artwork generates debate over students' rights to express themselves while liv- ing in campus housing units. Earlier this school year, Ryan Du Val, a music sophomore at Northwestern University, replicated a mural of Michaelangelo's Sistine hapel on the ceiling of his residence hall room. Du Val took Northwestern to federal ca in December after university a nistrators said they planned to paint over the mural during winter break. In an out-of-court settlement, Du Val and the university decided the mural would not be painted over until he-end of this school year. The Northwestern University senate ebated earlier this week a proposal hat would allow students to paint the alls of their residence hall rooms, as a as they removed their paintings bere .moving out at the end of each cademic year. Many members of the Northwestern ssociated Student Government had upported Du Val's right to paint his eiling and his work was profiled in he Feb. 8 edition of People Magazine. DuVal said he wanted to brighten he dull white walls of his room. p ice seize nks, search for ate rape drug In search of a date rape drug, police nd security officials at Brown niversity collected drink samples nom a party at the Phi Kappa Psi fra- ernity house Friday night. estigators plan to test the drink ales for Rohypnol, more common- y known as "roofies," one of the most idely used date rape drugs. The investigation began after a oma i was allegedly sexually assault- d Friday night at Alpha Tau Omega raternity. She claims the assault >curred after Rohypnol was slipped nto her drink, and she lost conscious- ess. Phi Kappa Psi representatives said hoare certain Rohypnol was not laced in drinks at the fraternity's party. tudy: living ogether doesn't uarantee glee Researchers at Rutgers University ound that living together before mar- i leads to a higher chance of livorce. "The key finding is that living ogether outside of marriage tends to generate attitudes about relationships hat are not helpful when you marry," ;aid-David Popenoe, co-director of the Rutgers University National Marriage Project. The study concluded that nearly 60 erceht of people who live together niry, and almost 50 percent of mar- -ia* end in divorce. "Marriage is based heavily on a ;trong, long-term commitment to nothir person," he said. Cohabitation is basically the opposite f .that. You get into a pattern that orks against having a long-term, :omipitted relationship," Co-Director f the National Marriage Project Barbara Whitehead said. &?udents still on hunger strike More than 100 students at Indiana University continue a hunger strike :hey began at the University of Notre Dame on Feb. 3. The students are asting to show support to have the :ategory of sexual orientation pro- :ected under Notre Dame's discrimi- a policy. tudent-run gay and lesbian :rganization at Notre Dame, which was formed 28 years ago, is not per- itted to hold meetings on campus, post advertisements or buy adver- isement space in the campus news- paper. -Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Lauren Gibbs. Housing proposes plan to MSA reps Assembly members greet presentation with questions, concerns about projeCt 8y Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter A plan for a new dining hall that would consolidate four Hill area dining halls was the hot topic at last night's Michigan Student Assembly meeting when two University Housing representatives talked to assembly members about the plan and displayed pictures of similar facilities at other universities. Director of Housing William Zeller and interim Director of Resident Halls Dining Services William Durell stopped by the MSA meeting to discuss University Housing's construction proposal that would cost nearly $1.5 million and take three years to build. MSA plans to vote on a resolution next week to support Housing's plans to build the Hill Area Dining Center. At the meeting, assembly members were receptive to the Housing presentation, but expressed concern about the dining hall's use. "As long as students are involved in the input, this will hopefully be a step forward for students in the Hill area," MSA Treasurer Bram Elias said..r If built, Zeller said the 50,000-square-foot dining hall would stand on the south side of Mosher-Jordan Residence Hall, adja- cent to Palmer Field. As part of its plan, University Housing would close dining halls at Couzens, Alice Lloyd, Mosher-Jordan and Stockwell residence halls. "Each of the dining halls we currently have need major renova- tion,' Zeller said. Zeller said the new dining hall would basically be a food court. "We want to bring in some sort of convenient store operation," Zeller said. Durell and Zeller said the cost of building the new dining facility would equal the cost of renovating the current Hill area dining halls. If Housing decided to renovate the four existing halls, students' room and board rates would increase, Zeller said. "That money would come from room and board increases," he said, assuring MSA representatives that the new facility would be financed without increasing room and board rates. In addition to closing four dining halls, the plan Zeller and Durell presented also includes closing Mary Markley Residence Hall's din- ing facility on weekends. Closing the dining halls would free 50,000 square feet of space in dining halls, space that Zeller said could be used for living-learning services, such as classrooms and academic advising offices. MSA Vice President Sarah Chopp asked the Housing representa- tives about the status of dining hall project. Zeller answered by telling the assembly that the University Board of Regents approved the idea of a large Hill area dining facility in December 1996. But, Zeller said, University administrators are cur- rently deliberating Housing's plan. After administrators approve the final plans, he said, the Hill Area Dining Center would take approx- imately three years to build. In addition to the Housing proposal, a revised version of a resolu- tion to support the AT&T-sponsored Student Advantage contract was discussed at last night's assembly meeting. The resolution, which would allow the assembly to endorse the calling and debit card and possibly profit from the card, was voted down. MSA also welcomed three new representatives to its table. Architecture and Urban Planning Rep. Joel Kirzner and new LSA Reps. Jeff Omtvedt and Marisa Linn were appointed by their respec- tive schools after going through an application process. DARBY FRIEDUS/Dai4y William Zeller gives a presentation to the Michigan Student Assembly yesterday on a new dining facility for Hill area residence halls. "I have been active in the assembly's communication committee- since September," Omtvedt said. If students run for any one these seats during the assembly's bi- annual elections in March, the three appointed representatives must campaign to keep their seats. Study finds vaccine rates low among local gay men. By Tushar Sheth For the Daily Three University students concluded that Hepatitis B.vaccination rates among gay men in Ann Arbor were low in a study they con- ducted in 1997. LSA senior Katie Neighbors and University alumni Chinwe Oraka and Linda Shih conducted their study, titled "Awareness and Utilization of the Hepatitis B Vaccine Among Young Men in the Ann Arbor Are~a Who Have Sex With Men," in the fall of 1997 under vis- iting instructor Peter Lurie's supervision. The study, published in last month's issue of the Journal of American College Health, found that 67 percent of the sample group were aware of the high risk, but only 22 percent of them had been vaccinated. But 58 percent said they were willing to be vaccinated. The students interviewed 120 gay men for their study. Lurie said the results show a contradiction between the "alarm- ingly" low number of men who are vaccinated and those that are willing to be vaccinated. "The vaccination requires three shots to become effective, which can be a bit of a hassle," Lurie said. "Along with this, the vaccine is expensive. "It is also hard to identify gay men because, as a result of society's discrimination, many gay men don't identify themselves as such," he added. Mih/I Ligan joins i LANSING (AP) - Michigan is join- of a broader effort to make ing 25 other states and the federal gov- drugs profitable, it was a ernment in a lawsuit against five phar- either raising them or drol maceutical companies, Attorney General Shapiro said. "You could Jennifer Granholm said yesterday. cheaper than these thingsa According to the complaint, the Shapiro also said that defendants conspired to monopolize the prices have gone up, the market for the generic drugs drugs remain half the c lorazepam and clorazepate, both used brand-name competitors. to treat anxiety. The defendants also are "As more informationc accused of fixing drug prices. will be clear that Michigan Named in the suit are drug maker suit that has no basis in fac Mylan Laboratories Inc. of Pittsburgh, Lorazepam is prescribed Penn., and ingredient suppliers Cambrex iety and insomnia and is Corp. of East Rutherford, ,N.J.; control nausea in some Profarmaco S.R.L. of Milan, Italy; Gyma AIDS patients. Doctors fil Laboratories of America Inc. of lion prescriptions each} Westbury, N.Y.; and SST Corporation of drug, often to nursing ho Clifton, N.J. pice patients. Granholm said the alleged activities Clorazepate also is used began in 1997, when Mylan approached ety as well as hypertension the manufacturers and negotiated an out about 3 million prescri exclusive supply deal in exchange for a drug each year, often as par promise to raise prices. for nicotine and opiate wits . After Mylan cornered the market Granholm said the on the ingredients, the suit says, alleged actions cost th prices for lorazepam and clorazepate Medicaid program million jumped more than 2000 percent. The Granholm spokesman Ch price per 500-count bottle of estimated that one millic lorazepam rose from $7.30 to Michigan use the drugs. $191.50, while the price per 500- "The astronomical pri count bottle of clorazepate rose from which these drug com $11.36 to $377.50. extracted from the consum Mylan spokesperson David Shapiro cal and illegal," Granhor said yesterday that action against the lawsuit will require the dr company is "radical, rushed and wrong." to pay back their ill-gotte Shapiro denied that the price increase substantial penalties." was connected to any arrangements The suit alleges multiple with ingredient suppliers, adding that the federal Sherman Antitr prices went up on several of the compa- as the Michigan Antitrust R ny's other drugs as well. seeks triple damages and cc "When Mylan raised prices as part of both consumers and the The three students conducted the study when they took Lurie's class "Research Based Health Activism," which was offered through the Residential College and Inteflex Program. Lurie now works for the Public Citizen's Health Research Group, a health advocacy orga- nization based in Washington, D.C. "The students started the project in the fall and continued on with it after the class had ended," Lurie said. A warning issued by the Center for Disease Control recom- mending that gay men be vaccinated for Hepatitis B prompted the students to conduct their study. Oraka and Shih said they wanted to find out what percentage of gay men in Ann Arbor had been vaccinated. Lurie said some of the ways Hepatitis B is spread is through sex- ual contact and contaminated injection equipment. The nature of male homosexual contact puts gay men at a higher risk of infection, he said. Using this information, the students prepared to conduct their study. "We identified a problem, wrote a study protocol, received (Institutional Review Board) approval, collected data, analyzed data, and then published the data," Neighbors said. The students said they collected data from men at a few gay bars in Ann Arbor area. They also distributed their questionnaire to members of a gay swim team and members of two gay frater- nities, one at Eastern Michigan University and another sponsored by the University's Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Affairs. The 120 men who participated in the study were asked questions such as "Do you know about the high risk of acquiring Hepatitis B among gay men?" and "Have you been vaccinatea and if not, why and are you willing to be vaccinated?" To increase the number of gay men who are vaccinated, Neighbors said all university health providers must make changes to their pro- grams. "In 1995, the American College Health Association made Hepatitis B one of the vaccines included in its recommended prema- triculation immunization requirements. "We are urging university health services around the country to do all that they can to implement this recommendation," Neighbors said. "For example, university health services should conduct outreach programs to their local gay communities to increase vaccine use among homosexual and bisexual young men, a high risk group for hepatitis B, although, most of whom have not yet been infected." Through their study, which the students said was a valuable expe- rience, Oraka said they hope to impact the public health field. "It was time-consuming, but definitely one of my most rewarding experiences as a student" Oraka said. "This shows what dedicated undergrads can accomplish when they are motivated to promote the public health;' Lurie said. n it unprofitable question of pping them," buy M&Ms at the time." even though , the generic cost of their comes out, it has joined a ct," he said. d to treat anx- also used to cancer and I1 out 18 mil- year for the me and hos- to treat anxi- . Doctors fill ptions for the xt of therapies hdrawal. companies' e Michigan ns of dollars. hris De Witt on people in ce increases panies have er are unethi- m said. "The ug companies n gains with violations of ust Act as well Reform Act. It osts on behalf state. ;,* ' IL{I:. L. kLLNI l~L_: What's happening in Ann Arbor, Sponsored by Alpha Kappa Delta today www.umich.edu/-info on the EVENTS I