The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, September 12, 2007 - 7A 'U' will distribute anti-Zionist book Police say woman was tortured in trailer for days BOOK From page 1A dedicated to academic freedom and open debate among differing views, the Executive Board stands firmly for freedom of expression, and against eventhe appearance of cen- sorship." The board did say that Pluto's decision to publish "Overcoming Zionism" has led it to reconsider the University Press's 4-year-old contract with Pluto. It plans to make a decision later this fall about whether it will continue contract- ing with the company. The board's chair, Prof. Peggy McCracken, did not return calls for comment yesterday. A blog called Dissident Veteran for Peace posted in August what it claims is an e-mail that Univer- sity Press Director Philip Pochoda sent on Aug. 24 to Kovel, the book's author. In the e-mail, Pochoda said he was planning to defend the book's distribution with a "free speech defense" but was appalled by what he called Kovel's "reckless, vicious, and unmodulated attack on Zionism and all Zionists." The e-mail went on to say that the book wasn't something the Uni- BIRTH CONTROL From page 1A few years. And because UHS stock- piled contraceptives before the law went into effect, it should stay that way - at least for several months. "It's hard to gauge exactly how long the supply will last," Chivers said. "Wehave alwaysmade aneffort to pass on any savings that we can to the student population. I think that it's an unfortunate situation that it's outof our hands right now." How long the prices at UHS will remain constant depends on both demand and expiration date. The current packs of Ortho Tri-Cyclen Lo expire in September of next year, Chivers said. UHS was one of the few local institutions that was able to buy versity wouldn't want to be associ- ated with. "Perhaps such vituperative and aggressive rhetoric works for the barricades," the e-mail said. "But it cannot be countenanced or underwritten by the university or the university press, even in this peripheral, distributed capacity." Kovel defended his work. "My book is a very carefully rea- soned and researched effort to open up a line of thinking that has been stifled," he said. Pochoda did not return calls for comment yesterday. Pochoda declined to comment on the e-mail for an article published yesterday by the online magazine Inside- HigherEd.com. Political Science Prof. Ronald Stockton said because the Middle East inspires such heated debate, the University Press should be careful about giving in to pressure from outside groups. "Anything you publish on the Middle East, someone is going to be upset," Stockton said. "As a uni- versity press, you can't give into that." ahead before the measure went in effect. Without insurance, the same pack of pills costs $56.99 at the CVS on South Industrial Highway. At the Village Apothecary on South University Avenue, it costs $55.51. At Michigan State University's Olin Health Center, the price of Ortho Tri-Cyclen Lo has jumped to roughly $50. Some students said women on campus won't stop buying the pill in the event of a price increase. "It's one of those things that even if the price increased, people still need to have it, so it doesn't make a difference," said LSA sophomore Ashlee Arder. But those who don't have insur- ance - and part-time students who cannot use UHS's discounts - might not be able to pay the extra $20 or $30. ROB MIGRIN/Daily Larry Cox, the director of Amnesty International USA, told a crowd in Rackham Auditorium yesterday that the Sept.11 terrorist attacks allowed the government to rall hack haman Bights. SEPT.11 From page 1A what was inherently a senseless act," said Helen Rosenthal, Josh- ua's sister. Helen Rosenthal praised Cox's speech. "I wish our country had taken the approach that he laid out on Sept. 12," Rosenthal said. "He describes where we need to be going in a thoughtful, powerful and accurate way." Sacha Feirstein, a second-year graduate student in the School of Social Work, said she expected to see more students attend the lec- ture. "I was surprised that when the University publicizes a talk on 9/11, human rights and Amnesty International that more young people wouldn't be interested in attending," Feirstein said. "I feel the young people should come run- ning to understand more and learn how to become involved." Cox said young people are some of the most ardent supporters of human rights. "We're not a narrow constitu- ency," he said. Six charged in case yelled racial slurs, police say By CHRIS STRATTON and IAN URBINA The New York TImes LOGAN, W.Va. - A 20-year-old woman was held captive for more than a week in a mobile home where she was raped, stabbed and tortured by at least a half-dozen people, the police said. Sheriff's deputies rescued her on Saturday, and she remained hospitalized yes- terday in stable condition. "I've been in law enforcement for more than 30 years, and this is the first time I've ever seen anything of this nature," the Logan County sheriff, Eddie Hunter, said. Six people, including a mother and her son and a mother and her daughter, have been charged in the case. The police said the people charged, all of whom are white, yelled racial slurs at the woman, who is black, during some of the attacks. The woman endured hor- rific torture, according to court documents. She was raped by mul- tiple men, some of whom poured scalding water on her during the assaults, according to the crimi- nal complaints. She was forced to lick up blood, eat animal feces and drink water from a toilet, the documents said, and she was also stabbed repeatedly in the leg and was told that if she tried to leave, she would be killed. The police said that more than a week ago, the victim went with Bobby R. Brewster, 24, whom she believed was a friend, to the trailer where he lives with his mother, Frankie Lee Brewster, 49, in Big Creek, in the northern end of Logan County. Yesterday, the police were inter- viewing the victim further about two more people she said were involved. On Saturday, Logan County deputies received a tip about a woman being held against her will at the Brewster residence. A per- son working in the area had heard disturbing noises coming from the trailer and seen the victim with cuts on her leg through the win- dow, the police said. "Upon the deputies' arrival, they found Mrs. Frankie Brews- ter sitting on the front porch," a police report says. The deputies asked Brewster if anyone else was at the residence and she said she was alone. As she was talking, the police documents say, Brewster got up and stepped toward the door, when a woman inside limped toward the door with her arms held out and said, "Help me." The woman's eyes were bruised and she had four large stab wounds on her left leg, the police said. Police documents say Frankie Brewster admitted to holding the victim at the trailer against her will and beating her. The victim was taken to Logan Regional Hospital and then to the General Hospital of Charles- ton Area Medical Center, where she underwent surgery for her leg wounds. Frankie Brewster was charged with sexual assault, kidnapping, malicious wounding and giv- ing false statements to an officer. Bobby Brewster was charged with kidnapping, sexual assault, mali- cious wounding and assault during the commission of a felony. The Brewster family and their trailer has a history of violent crime, the police said. Bobby Brewster killed his step- father there when he was 12, the authorities said, and served time at a juvenile correction facility. In July 1994, Frankie Brews- ter shot and killed an 84-year-old woman she was looking after, also in the trailer, according to court records. Frankie Brewster, who was charged with first-degree murder, pleaded guilty to volun- tary manslaughter and served six years at a state correctional facil- ity. She was paroled in 2000. In 2005, two men got into a fight outside the trailer, the police said, ending with a fatal stabbing. In January, the police were again called to the trailer, where they found a man who had been slashed across his abdomen; the man survived, according to court documents, and Bobby Brewster was a witness in that case. The authorities said they were still deciding whether to file addi- tional charges, of hate crimes, against the defendants. GREEN From page 1A doesn'tofferspecificconcentrations. Instead, it allows students to gain experience in a variety of areas. Besides offering classes, Uhl- mann said the program will bring speakers to campus and host sym- posiums. He said he hopes to collaborate with other schools and colleges, includingtheGerald R.Ford Schoolof Public Policy and the School of Natu- ral Resources and Environment. Uhlmann said the program will offer about 10 courses this year, addressing not only environmental law but also natural resources and public policy. Many of the top law schools around the country have begun or are beginning similar programs, he said. "We want to be competitive with what other law schools are offer- ing," Uhlmann said. The University is in a position to distinguish itself in this area because of its ability to focus on issues involving the nearby Great Lakes, he said. Browner said climate change is the biggest environmental issue facing this generation. She said future generations will have to regulate all greenhouse gases, collaborategloballyandiden- tify ineffective solutions in order to keep others engaged. "We need to be thinking about what the rest of the world is doing," she said. Second year Law student Ser- ena Liu said environmental law is changing industry, which is inter- esting for a future lawyer. "It's very much a developing field," she said. - Miao Qing contributed to this report. APPLICATION From page 1A Sanders said the criteria for admission are the same as last year, except the essay applicants to every one of the University's schools and colleges must write has changed. The essay asks prospective stu- dents to respond to a statement made by University President Mary Sue Coleman in a speech she delivered the day after Proposal 2 passed. "We know that diversity makes us a better university - better for learning, for teaching, and con- ducting research," the statement reads. The application then asks stu- dents to "share an experience through which you have gained respect for intellectual, social, or cultural differences." The previous three applications used a question created after the Supreme Court overturned the University's point-based under- graduate admissions system in 2003, which asked students how they could contribute to the "diverse talents, experiences, opin- ions, and cultural backgrounds" on campus. The biggest difference in this year's application process is the creation of an early response pro- gram, which ensures that students who apply by Oct. 31 receive a response by Dec. 21. The program differs from early decision programs used by other schools because the decision isn't binding. While students admit- ted in early decision programs are required to accept the deci- sion, early response applicants can wait until May to tell the University whether they intend to enroll. Students who don't apply by the early response deadline will still receive an admissions decision within eight to 12 weeks under the University's existing rolling admissions process. Although the early response program may encourage more students to apply early in the admissions process, the goal of the program was not to make the application process more competi- tive, Sanders said. "We want to relieve anxiety for their senior year," Sanders said. Tom Hu, a high school senior from West Bloomfield who plans to apply to the University this fall, said the program will reassure stressed-out high school seniors. "A lot of kids were waiting a long time last year before they got their results from Michigan," he said. "It's kind of nice that now they guarantee a response by that date." 810 S State Street 222-4822 - 1906 Packard 995-9940 -"btbburrito.com Feel lost in the big blue? JOIN THE DAILY. Come toour last mass meeting of the semester on Tuesday, Sept. 18 at 8 p.m. at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard St., just northwest of the Michigan Union. Or stop by the building any time. Or e-mail news@michigandaily. com