Tuesday, March 30, 2004 News 3 New campus web- site offers e Bay- style service Michigan faces Oregon tonight in the NIT semifinals ... Sports, Page 8 4r1Mr4au Weather Opinion 4 Aubrey Henretty takes on censors Arts 5 The Daily flags a Death Cab for Cutie . H. 53 TOMORROW: 4(I31 ©2004 The Michigan Daily Oehudredihtmyerir' fedonri~eedom ' www~michig~zdaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 123 . Alleged rape under investigation VicJtim reportedly assaulted at fraternity while intoxicated By Donn M. Fresard and Anne Joling Daily Staff Reporters The Ann Arbor Police Department con- firmed yesterday that an investigation is under- way regarding an alleged rape at an unregistered fraternity party Friday night. According to officers' accounts of a police report, the victim remembered having sexual intercourse with an unknown male inside the fraternity house after consuming a large amount of alcohol. The victim did not, how- ever, remember where in the house the inci- dent occurred or how she got back to her residence hall. Nancy Diehl, chief of trials at the Wayne County prosecutor's office, said a person who is sufficiently intoxicated is considered "physi- cally helpless" under Michigan law, and would be unable to legally give consent to sexual intercourse. Diehl added that sexual intercourse with a physically helpless victim constitutes third-degree criminal sexual conduct, a felony under Michigan law. The alleged rape reportedly took place at a fraternity on the 1400 block of Washtenaw Avenue. The two fraternity houses located on this block are Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Josh Dimkoff, executive vice president of PDT, said the fraternity is dry and does not serve alcohol at any gatherings. He added that there was no gathering at the PDT house Friday. But SAE had an unofficial party Friday night, said LSA junior Varujan Arman, a mem- ber of SAE. SAE President Dustin Nelson refused to comment. AAPD Lt. Mark Hoornstra said police are currently trying to locate a suspect and deter- mine the circumstances of the crime. "We will be interviewing people who were at the party and members of the fraternity to try and find a suspect," Hoornstra said. "Also, we are investigating to what extent the act might . have been consensual. Indications are that the victim was extremely intoxicated and we're not sure how much she remembers, so we're not sure if she gave consent or not." A friend of the victim reported to police that she found the victim in a closed room, where she saw the victim having sex with a man the witness did not recognize. The friend added that she was soon after forced out of the room. "Before she could enter the room further, someone grabbed her from behind and pulled her from the room and shut the door, then denied her access to the room after," Hoorn- stra said. The victim's friend then reportedly left the house and found the outside window of the room, where she called to her friend. She reported then seeing the male leave the room. The victim told police she arrived at the fra- ternity house at 11 p.m. with five friends. She said a closed gathering was taking place at the house, but she and her friends were allowed inside though they were not on the guest list. Police said the victim's resident advisor con- vinced her to go to a hospital, where a rape kit was administered. Interfraternity Council President Casey Bourke declined to comment. BUDGET CUTS Administrators address cuts to student services By Melissa Benton Daily Staff Reporter Students upset with recent budget cuts to student services confronted the targets of much of their criticism yes- terday. In a room filled with tension, Uni- versity President Mary Sue Coleman and Vice President for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper responded to demands posed by members of Student Voices in Action at the William Mon- roe Trotter House. But students and administrators questioned the productiveness of the.meeting. LSA senior Clair Morrissey said she was frustrated because none of SVA's demands were met. "They talk a lot about supporting us, but when you get them in the same room you see their true colors," said Morrissey an SVA member. But Morrissey added that the meeting was useful. "It's important to engage in the kind of dialogue we did today. I would have hoped the administrators were more open to listening," she added. Harper said she was also disap- pointed with the outcome of the meeting. "I think this was an oppor- tunity to have something accom- plished, but there was more of a commitment to the demands than to problem-solving. ... I think this could have been the start of a great new way to work together." Coleman started the meeting, expressing her desire to work together with students to find solutions. "Here's what I want to do: Figure.out ways to have more productive dia- logues. We need to accelerate some decisions that are taking too long ... You deserve that - the entire Universi- ty deserves that," Coleman said. As Coleman began to address the University's budget problems, LSA sen- ior Jackie Bray, an SVA member, cut her off and moved forward with SVA's 10 demands regarding undergraduate See STUDENTS, Page 3 ELISE BERGMAN/Daily Student Voices in Action meet with University President Mary Sue Coleman, Vice President for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper, University Provost Paul Courant and Dean of Students Ed Willis yesterday afternoon at the William Monroe Trotter House. The administrators heard the students' complaints about cuts to student services. NASA director praises Bush's space directive Some University aerospace engineers question whether program's goals are possible By Naila Moreira Daily Staff Reporter NASA's broad new plan for space exploration would take humans back to the moon and even- tually to Mars. Alfonso Diaz, a director of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, gave his program's goal - supported by the Bush administration - high marks in his speech at the University Friday. But University aerospace engineers have expressed mixed feelings about the agency's new focus. NASA will strive to meet President Bush's said that NASA's new plan will benefit the agency and the nation. "NASA the organization feels a new excite- ment as a consequence of the new vision. I think NASA is very invigorated," he said. Gombosi added that federal money spent on NASA aids the U.S. economy, largely from industrial use of new science and technology NASA has developed. According to the NASA website, every dollar spent on programs at the agency returns $7 in "direct and indirect benefits." But engineering Prof. Tony England, a former astronaut, expressed concern that Bush's new directive will squeeze the budgets of important ongoing NASA research. He mentioned studies of the Earth and its changing climate as pro- grams that may suffer. ENVIRONMENT Campus trees killed ofby small beetle By Genevieve Lampinen Daily Staff Reporter The University might be less green this spring with 200 to 250 fewer ash trees around campus. These deaths are not attributed to pesticides or clearing of land, but rather to a small beetle, known as the emerald ash borer. Out of the 900 ash trees on campus, the University has already removed 192 in efforts to prevent the spread of the beetle. Several more trees are expected to die as spring pro- gresses. But, 100 new trees will be planted on campus dur- ing the next few months to replace the old ones and to increase the amount of foliage on campus. The University's ash trees are primarily located on North Campus in the family housing area and around campus parking by Michigan Stadium, said Facilities and Opera- tions spokeswoman Diane Brown. The beetle, native to China, has triggered a near-statewide epidemic, dramatically affecting tree populations every- where. Its negative effects will be worse than those recently experienced with the European Gypsy moth or Dutch elm disease, said Marvin Pettway, University supervisor of forestry and horticulture. "In China and Russia it's not a major problem because it's probably native and has its own population control. Here, it is exotic and so it is out of population control mechanisms. It's running rampant," Pettway said, adding that there is no biological regulation of the beetle in the United States. The Michigan Department of Agriculture quarantined ash trees in 13 affected Michigan counties in the fall of 2002, after it first isolated and identified the insect as a major pest to ash trees the previous summer. The quarantine, originally scheduled to expire on Aug. 5, was extended indefinitely last Thursday, until the beetle risk has been eliminated. "This program new directive for space explo- ration, Diaz announced in a speech at the University's Francois-Xavier Bagnoud building. Faculty and students offered both praise and criticism of the plan, saying a new vision for the future will spur NASA forward, but the directive's goals and timeline may be unrealistic. Bush's directive calls for manned missions to the moon by 2020, with the goal of establishing a lunar base from which future manned missions to Mars could be launched. The plan also calls for robotic exploration of the moon by 2008, completion of "This program that (Bush has) outlined is so under-funded that the only chance to make any progress on it is to gut everything else:' - Tony England Engineering professor and forme astronau that (Bush has) outlined is so underfunded that the only chance to make any progress on it is to gut everything else;' he said. Bush's proposed budget for 2004 includes $1 billion in new money for the directive and reallocates $11 billion more to the plan from other NASA programs. He has proposed to boost NASA's total budget by 6 percent in 2005 to $16.2 billion. d Although England said he supports human space r exploration, he severely t criticized the new plan's focus on constructing a base on the moon. Political science Prof. Jennifer Widner speaks yesterday in the Michigan League during a conference on "The Current State of Africa." Paneli~sts discuss need for African autonomy By Faya Arrine Daily S Reporter The problem with Africa, according to American University economics Prof. George Ayittey and his col- leagues, is that the wrong groups are determining its fate. "Has anyone bothered to ask the Africans what they want?" he asked. Ayittey said he blamed the monopo- lization of power by a small group of elites as the leading cause of Africa's "Has anyone bothered to ask the Africans what they want?" - George Ayittey President, the Free Africa Foundation Ayittey, who is president of the Free