Weather: Thursday October 30, 2003 02003 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 41 mom = NJRJb" One-hundred-thirteen years of editorialfreedom TODAY: Partly cloudy dur- ing the day and night with moder- ate winds up to 13 mph. 64 51 Tomorrow: www.mnichigandaily. comn 111111 UNION Student assaulted near Frieze B dg Department of Public Safety issues crime alert after unknown male fondles female victim By Victoria Edwards and Emily Kraack Daily Staff Reporters A female University student was assaulted while walking alone on the 800 block of East Washington Street near the Frieze Building Lecture~rs rally for improved relations around 6:15 p.m. Tuesday. The student said an unidentified male jumped out at her from behind the bushes and forcibly fondled her, said Department of Public Safety Lt. Crystal James. The victim was able to escape by pushing her assailant off of her. She broke free, fled the area and contacted DPS. James said the suspect is described as a white male weighing about 150 pounds and 25 to 30 years of age. James said the suspect is between five-foot-ten and six feet tall and was identified as having dark, spiked hair. The victim described the suspect's clothing as a dark blue or black puffy, waist-length jacket. Tuesday's attack is currently classified as a second-degree criminal assault, a felony that carries a maximum of 15 years in prison. DPS is investigating the case and has no sus- pects. Anyone with information should con- tact the DPS Confidential Tip Line at 1-800-863-1355. The incident prompted DPS to release its third crime alert of this school year, informing the campus community of the incident and reminding students to take precautions while walking on campus. James said that students should take measures to reduce the risk of such assaults. Students should avoid walking alone in unsafe areas and should take advantage of DPS safety resources such as officer escorts and emergency phones offering a direct line to DPS, she added. "We always advise students to look assertive and to be aware of their surround- ings. It's also important to try to walk with a friend. If you're in an unsafe area, give us a call for an escort or try to get to a safer area," James said. This is the second crime alert issued in Octo- ber regarding an attack on a student walking alone. A crime alert was issued on Oct. 5 after an attack on a female student who was pushed to the ground by an unknown assailant while walking near the 600 block of State Street. That crime is still under investigation, and there are no current suspects. By Carmen Johnson Daily Staff Reporter Lecturers left their classrooms yester- day afternoon and rallied on the Diag to show their discontent with salary and job security, among other grievances, at the University. Lecturers Employee Organization members have been in negotiations since August with the administration and who agreed on several provisions but did not yet discuss the lecturers' key concerns. University spokeswoman Julie Peter- son said the University negotiation team is positive about the bargaining progress. Members of LEO spoke as they stood on the steps of the Harlan Hatcher Grad- uate Library and spoke of their individ- ual concerns as non-tenure faculty. Ian Robinson, who teaches in the Residential College and the sociology department, said lecturers deserve more respect. "Lecturers are treated like second- class citizens because we do not publish and research as much as professors do, but as lecturers we do the bulk of the teaching -- something, we believe is most important;' Robinson said. Residential College lecturer Martin Walsh participates in Lecturer Employees Organization's rally in the Diag yesterday. During the rally, participants held up paper masks to cover thier faces, and after introducing themselves, they turned the masks over to reveal their organization's logo. By the end of March, LEO members daughter's kindergarten teacher, who hope their demands are met and specifi- just graduated from Eastern (Michigan cally that their salary is increased. University), is making more than me," Kirsten Herold, who is on the LEO said Herold, an English lecturer. negotiation team, said lectures' salaries Because lecturers' positions are non- are "pitiful" compared to what profes- tenure - which, LEO members said sors receive. makes their job less secure - their "After 12 years of teaching here, my bargaining platform includes establish- ing explicit criteria for regular job evaluations. "I think job security is a very impor- tant issue," said Herold. "I know co- workers who don't even know if they are working next semester." LEO, formed last May, represents See .EO, Page 7A Death of student in '97 leaves message of love By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter The annual Tamara Williams Memorial Lecture, a series of lectures started to celebrate Williams' life and to remind everyone of the ongoing fight to end violence, started with a description of the circumstances under which she died. After her death in 1997, friends and family of Williams, then an LSA senior, said they had had no idea of the violence associated with Williams's relationship with boyfriend Kevin Nelson. The two had been in a long on-again, off-again relationship, accompanied by spouts of violence and abuse, which, according to police reports, started in November 1995. Though friends knew Williams occasionally fought with Nelson, they had no idea how serious the situation was. On Sept. 23, 1997, the secret violence led to a tragedy that shocked campus. That morning, Nel- son stabbed Williams to death, then was fatally shot by Department of Public Safety officers after he refused to drop his weapon. "I was never aware of the violence in their rela- tionship. You know how kids are, they always try to keep anything bad away from you," Jeanette Hart, Williams' grandmother, told the Daily after the stabbing. "This is the first time I even heard about the domestic violence charge." The murder was the most serious crime to hap- pen on campus in at least the last 10 years, Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said yesterday. Last night, standing in front of a room full of students, Tamara's mother, Yvonne Williams, made a heartfelt plea to her audience: Don't make the same mistake. "To all the students, the ladies, the men, I just want to say, just be careful, take care of your- selves ... if you have a problem, tell somebody. Tell your mother. Tell your father. Tell some- body," she said, adding that life since her daugh- ter's death has continued to be a struggle. "Just keep on keeping on and don't let anyone stop you. Please don't let anyone stop you," she See DEATH, Page 5A Loretta Ross speaks yesterday in "Freedom from Violence is a Human Right," part of the annual lecture series in memory of Tamara Williams, a University student murdered in 1997. 'M' women's soccer stuns second-ranked Irish By Melanie Kobler Daily Sports Writer SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Something was in the air for the Michigan women's soccer team last night when it took on No. 2 Notre Dame (18-1-1 overall) in South Bend. Maybe it was the Wolver- ines' need to improve their spooky 6-6-6 overall record in order to gain an NCAA Tournament berth. Maybe it was just time for the Fighting Irish's yearly domi- nance of Michigan to die an ugly death. Whatever the case may be, it was the Wolverines who did the tricking and who came out with the treat - a 3-2 upset of the nation's second-best team. "This means everything," Michigan coach Debbie Rademacher said of the win's importance to the now 7-6-6 Wolverines. "This puts us above .500, which is the first criteria of the NCAA about a probable NCAA berth. Yester- day's win broke Michigan's eight-game losing streak against the Fighting Irish, a team it has never beaten. And the three- goal outburst was the most Michigan has and broke the Irish's 10-game shutout streak when freshman forward Katie Kramer collected the ball on the left side of the box and Dame keeper. lifted it over the Notre scored in a game since its 4-2 win over Iowa State in early September. "It's amazing," freshman goalkeeper Megan Tuura said. "We had nothing to lose, and we came out as hard as we could. Everything fell into place tonight." "We had no lose and we as hard as w% Everything place tonigh Fr "It was huge," thing to Rademacher said of scoring first in the came out game. "We knew if ve could. we could surprise (them) and get an fell into early one in, then we 1t could get comfort- 't. able and maybe not - Megan Tuura be so nervous." eshman goalkeeper The nerves seemed to disappear after that first goal and didn't come back even after Notre Dame notched an equalizer one minute later. Before the half was over, sophomore forward Therese Heaton had knocked home a goal lead into halftime. "Most of our goals in the last half of the season came on set plays," Rademacher said. "We've been having trouble scoring, so we said, 'We don't care (where the goals come from).' We've just been making the most of it." Michigan stretched its lead early in the second half on another corner kick. Freshman Katelin Spencer headed a hard ball toward goal that Notre Dame keeper Erika Bohn deflected into the crossbar, and senior forward Stephanie Chavez, who has made a habit of being in the right place at the right time, knocked in the rebound. Even though the Fighting Irish slipped a second goal past Michigan's defense with about 20 minutes left in the second half, they were unable to take the lead at any point in the game. Tuura - who played the whole game instead of split- Tuura was even feeling happy enough to joke about the Wolverines' record. "Now we don't have to worry about being 6-6-6 anymore," she said, laugh- iniy i