Weather Today: Partly cloudy. High 47 Tomorrow: Haze. High 52. * it a *arO . Low 33. One hundred ninze years of ediatrfrredom Thursday December 2, 1999 _'4 I Students will no longer get grades by mail Dr By Robert Gold Daily Staff Reporter Describing the routine send-off of semester grades to stu- dents' homes as "mailing- just for the sake of mailing," University Registrar Thomas McElvain said the need for paper markers of students' academic records has become obsolete. Beginning this term, students will not receive a mailed By Hanna LoPa copy of their final semester grades. The Office of the Daily Staff Reporter Registrar notified students of the change late Tuesday night At four feet s a mass e-mail. years of age, Dr. "It doesn't accomplish much," McElvain said. a typical sex syn Under the old policy, students received fall semester report ing icon of sex i cards at their University address and winter semester grades More than I to their permanent address. munity member McElvain said that the University has mailed grade sheets Theater last nig for "certainly more than 25 years," and the number of grade sex therapist g access options has improved in the last five. Students instant- "Let's Talk Abot ly can access their grades via Wolverine Access on the Hillel Gover Internet or via the University's touch-tone phone system. Shari Katz welc "These are real time transactions' McElvain said, explain- introduced U Sthat students can get the more up-to-date grade informa- Nursing Prof. E t through these other means, whereas the mailings as the "Dr. Ruth become inaccurate in some cases. "All these transactions are -n.---:-Fair.and running" immediately "through the University database." Inside: Fair and For LSA first-year student Rachel Kelly, Tuesday's e-mail was news to embrace. "I think that's good because my par- ents would definitely open it up," she said. "I'd rather find out on my own." For the past three years, the University has provided stu- dents with free official transcripts, with the exception of same-day requests, which cost $ 10. cElvain said discussions between the Registrar's office a d student groups set up by the Office of Student Affairs helped the office make its decision. "Focus groups told us it's a redundant and not really useful document," he said. LSA junior Sherry Guirguis said the change means little to her. "It's not such a big deal," she said. "I usually check on the phone anyway." McElvain said representatives from each of the University's schools and colleges brought the issue before their respective administrations for approval. Esrold Nurse, assistant LSA dean for student academic * irs, said the Registrar's office "addressed the issues students ught forth," such as the accuracy and validity of over-the- phone or Internet-recorded grades and having physical proof of grades. "Many of them are obsolete as soon as they are sent," See GRADES, Page 7A 'Tech'nical knockout DAVID KATZDaily Michigan Freshman Jamal Crawford dunks over the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets last night in Atlanta during Michigan's 80-77 win as part of the ACC-Big Ten Challenge. Inside: Full basketball coverage. Page IQA. IV I Living off campus d i oth saiin By David Enders complaints and concerns, especially 'U marks AIDS Day Ruth talks :)ut safie sex tin "She has a natural pleasant outlook - 'r . a joyful feeling about sexuality" Hacker even inches tall and 71 said. "She's the Dr. Sylvia of the East." Ruth Westheimer isn't "I don't think the field of human mbol, but she is the liv- sexuality should only be dealt with by n America today. short people," Westheimer said as she ,200 University com- stepped onto a large platform and up s packed the Michigan to the podium, referring to Hacker's ht to hear the famous similarly small stature. give her presentation, Mixing anecdotes with adamant sex- t Sex." ual advice, Westheimer's 45-minute ning Board member monologue alternated between laughs omed the audience and and advice about prevention of diseases, Iniversity associate unplanned pregnancies and how to meritus Sylvia Hacker achieve pleasure in sexual relationships of the Midwest." See DR. RUTH, Page 2A candlelie-------------------------------------------- candlelight vigil commemorate World AIDS Day. Page 3A Photos by JEREMY MENCHIK/Daily ABOVE: Renowned sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer speaks to a packed house at the Michigan Theater last night. C a M P u s BELOW: The University Museum of Art draped its paintings In black cloth yesterday to observe Day Without Art. On the screen is the film "Blue," made by director Derek Jarman who lost his sight due to AIDS. cloaked - By Jessica Weiss For the Daily It is as plain as minimalist art: a solid color in a textile medium. And like art, it also conveys a bold mes- sage. Yet the black cloth makes no claim to be art. Instead, it symbolizes a day of mourning. Day Without Art is a worldwide day to recognize the significance of art on society. The University Museum of Art showed its dedication a°See ART, Page 2A Southworth case could limit groups By Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter More than a sense of anticipation has filled the 24 campuses of the University's of Wisconsin System. A silent fear has settled itself in the minds of some fac- ulty, students and administrators who await the Supreme Court's verdict on The Wisconsin V. Board of Regents of the University Southworth of Wisconsin v. Scott Southworth. The case could force public uni- versities across the country to P restructure the way they fund stu- dent organizations through student fees, if the Court upholds lower court rulings against Wisconsin. The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Wisconsin and its student government, the Associated Students of Madison, must stop funding groups tha Campus cnme rates stabe for ast years By David Enders Daily Staff Reporter Statistics show that campus crime rates have hovered around the same numbers'during the past three years, according to a report the Department of Public Safety released yester- day. The statistics show that between 1996 and 1998, the number of reported violent crimes - including forcible rape, sexual offenses and robbery - have remained nearly identical while aggravated assaults have increased from 11 in 1996 to 19 last year. Property crimes such as larceny and car theft have shown a downward trend, according to the report. The number of arrests for liquor law violations jumped more than any other crime, steadily rising from 271 in 1996 to 373 last year. engage in ideological or political advocacy. The potential decrease in diversity at schools if the Supreme Court bans funding to politically oriented student groups has members of many minority student groups that rely on such funds worried about how they will maintain an active voice on campus. In Southworth's original suit, he named 18 organiza- tions that he ideologically disagreed with, including the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Campus Center and La Colectiva Cultural de Aztlan, a Latino/a group. "The case is a direct attack on diversity groups," said Adam Klaus, chair of the ASM. "It's going to have an absolute chilling effect on the campus climate if this ruling is upheld." David O'Brien, senior director of LGBTCC, said because the center must seek funding from outside sources, a Supreme Court ruling in favor of Southworth would mean a significant decrease in group activities. "We'll spend time raising funds that we could spend serving students." O'Brien said the three-judge panel that made the 7th Circuit Court decision did not understand the implications such a verdict could have on the variety of voices heard on campus. "They didn't get that the system doesn't limit speech," O'Brien said. "It provides more opportunity for speech, particularly for groups of students who might not normally have an opportunity to be heard." Jennifer Calderos, co-chair of La Colectiva Cultural de Aztlan, expressed additional fears about what the implications of a verdict in favor of Southworth would mean for minority student groups. "Sometimes it feels like our concerns really don't matter" Calderos said, adding that ideas that have not considered the perspective of many minority students may have influenced the 7th Circuit Court. "That's why See WISCONSIN, Page 8A Some critical of EgtAir 990 covera By Tiffany Maggard Daily Staff Reporter The crash of EgyptAir flight 990 off of the Eastern seaboard last month produced massive destruction and tragedy, and the aftermath of the crash is still burning vio- lently across the University's campus. "Two Arabs were forced off (a later flight) and held all day for suspicious behavior. All they were doing was asking about the dinner menu and using the bathroom. If the flight attendants had looked at the State Department statistics, how many terrorists are really Arabs?" LSA senior Will Youmans, president of the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee, raised questions like this in a Town Hall meeting last night to address racial tension sur- rounding media coverage of the EgyptAir investigation. Fifty other students, mostly Arab-American. gathered in the Michigan Union Wolverine Room to defend and debate racist implications in media coverage of developments in the EgyptAir crash. Youmans said he and other Arab-American students have been angered by press releases that allege Arab-Americans r r Daily Staff Reporter Toilets exploding. Raw sewage back- ing up into basements. Sparks shooting *m outlets. Ceilings collapsing. Landlords ignoring all of these problems. Ask a University student if they have - a story about off- campus housing, n-depth and there's a good chance you'll get when it comes to students and rental properties. Shira Katz had such a problem last year when she was living in a house managed by Oppenheimer Properties. "We moved in in May," the LSA senior said. That month, "water started coming into our room to the point where we had 13-gallon garbage cans that would fill every two days." "That is probably a result of our zero toler- ance policy with regard to alcohol in the Stadium," Bess said. The number of liquor law arrests increased from 330 in 1997 to 373 in 1998. The most noticeable drop came in larceny rates, which have decreased from more than 1,800 in 1996 to less than 1,400 reported last year. Bess, who became head of DPS four months ago, attributed the change to new DPS pro-