4v 41V PMRW toan :43trtllj (Summer Weekly Student One hundred four years of editorial freedom Wednesday June 14,1995 egent seat set for vote By Amy Klein aily News Editor After at least three years of steady dicussions, compromises and revisions, a final proposal for a student representa- tive to the Board of Regents will'be sub- mitted to the regents this Friday. In an agenda supplement, a draft out- lines the responsibilities and limits of the student representative, a role that would belong to the president of the Michigan Student Assembly or his delegate. The epresentative would not sit at the regents' table, but would prepare statements for the regents meeting agenda and have the op- portunity to address the board bi-annually on student issues. MSA President Flint Wainess said that the new proposal is a compromise. "This is a trial run. Let's take the step and see if it works, and if it doesn't, then we can go back to the drwing board,"Wainess said. "I thinkMSAisontheroadtobecom- ng a powerful voice for the students." Regent Laurence Dietch (D- Bloomfield Hills), however, said that while he supports the new proposal, he is not confident that MSA is representative of the entire student body. "I'm certainly for us having as much SEE REGENTS. PAGE 2 Mitchell A testifes to SinnOCence aB Frank C. Lee Dlails Staff Reporter LSA senior Tanisha Giles, an Orientation leader, leads her group on a tour of Central Campus. Sumer Orientation shows slice of ''lf Accused Ann Arbor serial rapist Ervin Dewain Mitchell Jr. took the witness stand yesterday in his own defense in the two- week-old trial to deny his involvement with the crimes. Closing statements in the trial are expected to begin this morning, and the case will then go to the jury. Mitchell, 33, is suspected of raping four women on the city's west side and killing one of the victims in the process. If con- victed, he couldbe sentenced to life in prison without parole. The defendant, an Inkster, Mich., native, testified he was not on Longshore Drive or Miller Avenue when two of the rapes occurred in Septem- ber and October of 1993. Mitchell also said he and his girlfriend were in Inkster doing lawn work on his uncle's property on May 7, 1994 - the day he allegedly killed a University em ployee during a sexual assault. When asked of his whereabouts the day a woman was raped in Eberwhite Woods near Liberty Street in 1992, Mitchell told the jury of 10women and six menhe was athismother'shouse mInkster Mitchell and said, "I did not come to Ann Arbor that day. "No, I did not (know about Eberwhite Woods)-at that par- ticular time," Mitchell testified. 'That area was very not familiar to me as it is now afterbeing here 2 1/2 years. On Monday, Washtenaw County Prosecutor Brian Mackie rested the state's case after testimony fromMichigan State Police crime DNA lab technicians. Charles Bama, head of the state's DNA laboratory, testified that DNA samples taken from Mitchell match semen recovered from the rape victims. Using statistical methods that Barna con- sidered "conservative," the DNA technicians estimated that there is a one in eight million chance that someone other than Mitchell SEE MruCHEu., PAGE 8 By Deborah G. Weinstein Daily Staff Reporter The cycle of 30 summer Orientation sessions be- gan Sunday, filling East Quad with the first group from the class of 1999. Signs that orientees have arrived in Ann Arbor include the infamous yellow folders and crowded sidewalks. Ann Arbor resident Patrick Carlson said Orienta- tion brings fresh faces to campus. "It's funny to watch people walk around South University and see all the stores for the first time and be excited," he said. "You get used to a place after a while. Their reaction makes you feel good, think, 'Wow, cool stuff is in Ann Arbor."' Each Orientation session is three days long, comprised of placement testing, walking tours of campus and presentations. Student group leader and LSA senior Rob Cook said that heading an Orientation group is a way to introduce new stu- dents to the University. "(I got involved) because I like to deal with people. To be an Orientation leader is a good way to get involved, help the first-year students to start thinking about what to expect," Cook said. Stores in Ann Arbor do their part to prepare for Orientation. Ulrich's Bookstore, which has been involved with Orientation for approximately 20 years, will continue to participate this summer. SEE ORIENTATION, PAGE 8 'U' prof. snags prestigious fellowship By Craig 0. Sullivan For the Daito University researcher Michael A. Marletta has been selected as one of 24 creative individu- als to receive a $275,000 five-year fellowship from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. sA00 STILLMAN/D 0y Marletta, who joined the faculty of the Col- A day of support lege of Pharmacy at the University in 1987, said David Huff, an HIV-positive Ann Arbor he will use the fellowship to continue his resident, passes out balloons at the groundbreaking research on the role of nitric ox- IDS walk. See story, Page 3. ide in irnune system response. Arts: Wilco to perform in Pontiac/9 "They singled me out for the kinds of high- risk work I've done in the past," Marletta said. Marletta said that it is often difficult to re- ceive funding for radical research. "In order to get funding, researchers often have to work within certain safe parameters." he said. Marletta first discovered the role of nitric ox- ide in 1985, which controls a number of critical processes in the immune, cardiovascular and central nervous systems. His research has led to new treatments for infants with pulmonary hyper- tension. Sports: "The fellowship is not a reward," said Ara G. Paul, the dean of the College of Pharmacy. "The MacArthur foundation hopes to provide individu- als with financial freedom for future work." The Mac rturFoundationisoneofthelarges private philanthropic foundations in the United States, and it awarded a total of $140 million to fel- lowship recipiants in the past 14 years. The fellow- ships extend to eight major areas, including health, education, individual creativity and the environ- ment. SEE MARLEITA, PAGE 2 Marletta Wymer, Dolan bring home honors/12