The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 14, 1994 - 3 .Women of color unite at symposium By SHARI SITRON DAILY STAFF REPORTER % The harsh reality of surviving in a *rnulticultural world as a minority based on both gender and skin color brought 90 women together Saturday afternoon. r The first Women of Color Sympo- sium worked to create an atmosphere for women to share their experiences and build coalitions among them- selves. The participants in the sympo- sium also had a chance to hear about Issues of concern to them, including sexuality and leadership on campus. - One workshop addressed women of color in the environmental justice mnovement. Jesse DeerinWater, founder of Native Americans for a Clean Environment and a panelist at 'the symposium, conveyed a message ofhope for the future and urgedwomen to work together to eliminate danger from the environment. "I feel there's hope if we can get *the people who are poisoning the earth to leave it alone," she said, but added that it must be a multicultural effort if it is to succeed. 1 Grace Lee Boggs, a community activist from Detroit, agreed with DeerinWater. "I am not a prophet," Boggs said, "but I think the environ- nentalist movement has the potential to transform our society." In addition, Boggs said it is espe- cially important for women to get involved to clean up our environment. They are the ones who care for the sick and the ill," she said drawing the analogy between women nursing the sick and nursing the environment. The reaction to the symposium was quite positive and many partici- pants expressed their desires to attend similar conferences in the future. 0. Charlene Allen, a first-year gradu- ate student, said, "I think it's increas- Clintons are prepared to pay back taxes over Whitewater investment FROM DAILY WIRE SERVICES WASHINGTON - First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton said she and the president are prepared to pay back taxes if it turns out that they under- paid on their Whitewater real estate investment, according to reports pub- lished yesterday, as newly named White House Counsel Lloyd N. Cut- ler predicted that the controversy "will turn out to be nothing at all." Breaking her silence on the Whitewater affair, the first lady granted short interviews over the weekend to Time and Newsweek magazines as she prepared to resume her public campaign for health care reform in Denver today. U.S. News and World Report also quoted White House "insiders" as saying that David E. Kendall, the Clintons' personal attorney, has told the couple that all he has uncovered are "tax errors and improper deduc- tions" relating to the Whitewater af- fair. The magazine said Kendall "has assured the first couple that as far as he can tell they have not seriously violated the law." Reached at his law office yesterday afternoon, Kendall declined to comment. Meanwhile, the.Whitewater con- troversy dominated the television talk shows, with Cutler appearing on two major networks to defend the admin- istration while refusing to be drawn into detailed commentary on the mat- ter. Asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" if he agreed with Kendall that the Clintons may owe back taxes and penalties, Cutler replied, "All I can tell you is that Mr. Kendall is a very good private lawyer. ... What the Clintons did in this investment some 10 or 12 years ago is a private affairof theirs in which they're represented by private counsel. This is not really a White House matter." Cutler described his role as help- ing to deal with the impact of the case on the presidency and with making certain, "as President Clinton said when he asked me to take this job, that everything we do within the White House justifies public confidence in the openness and integrity of his ad- ministration." Despite his acknowledgment that he did not yet know all the details, Cutler defended the White House on several controversial issues, includ- ing the meetings of White House ' aides with offi- 'We can de cials of the Trea- stonewall,I sury Department and Resolution or later the Trust Corp. about to be hearn their investiga- tion into the sav- - L ings and loan White Ho company in- volved in the case. Those meetings are being investigated by Special Counsel Robert Fiske Jr. Fiske, a former New York prosecuter, has followed a standard technique in white-collar criminal cases: interviewing low-level func- tionaries before taking depositions from top players. It is widely assumed that he will wait to talk to Clinton and the first lady. While Fiske has declined to dis- cuss his strategy, lawyers both inside and outside his inner circle said his decision to interview White House aides and Rose Law firm couriers was an important first step intended to make it clear that any efforts to cover up possible crimes will be treated as seriously as the crimes themselves. Asked if Cutler had yet sat down with the Clintons and asked them to tell him everything they know about Whitewater, Cutler replied, "No, I b r" in b) 9U have not. I have had an opportunity to meet with the president at some length ... but I have not been into the details of Whitewater. ... I think in the end it will turn out, at least as far even a breath of criminal activity by either the president and the first lady, it will turn out to be nothing at all." Asked on CBS' "Face the Na- tion" if the president has told him whether he was innocent of any wrongdoing in the matter, Cutler re- sponded: "Of course, he said that to me. And I believe him." Cutler also told CBS that he ay, we can was certain the ut sooner Clintons and .rg their staffs e are going would cooper- gs.' ate fully with any congres- yd N. Cutler sional hearing ise counsel just the way they are now cooperating with the special counsel's office. Calls for hearings continued to come from the Republican Party, with Democrats just as adamant that they should be delayed. On ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley," Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) reiterated his desire to have congressional hearings on the con- troversy soon. "I think the sooner we have that, the better it's going to be for . President and Mrs. Clinton," he said. "We can delay, we can stonewall, but sooner or later there are going to be hearings." But House Speaker Thomas S. Foley (D-Wash.) said Congress should respect Fiske's request that there be no hearings until his inves- tigations of the White House meet- ings with RTC and Treasury offi- cials are concluded. JUDITH PERKINS/Daily Grace Lee Boggs, the keynote speaker for the Women of Color Symposium, addressed the audience on striking a balance in women's lives. ingly important for communities of color to work together because they share some of the same goals." The symposium also worked to build the confidences of women of color. "When you learn about the struggles of others, you realize you're not alone," said LSA first-year stu- dent Leia Chen. She added that it was beneficial to have the opportunity to hear the voices of minority women because many times they go unnoticed. The coordinators of the sympo- sium also said they were thrilled with its success. Melissa Lopez, from the Office of Academic Multicultural Ini- tiatives and the symposium commit- tee, said, "I hope participants will share some of the information they've learned here and I hope they will become active in their communities." I Israel votes to ban 2 Jewish aCtivist groups THE WASHINGTON POST JERUSALEM - Israel banned two Jew- .ish extremist groups yesterday, calling them ; terrorist" and saying it will use military and police powers to arrest their members and shut down their operations in the wake of the Hebron imassacre. I One group, Kach, was founded by the ,rlilitant Rabbi Meir Kahane, who advocated the expulsion of Arabs from the Israeli-occu- pied West Bank and sanctioned the use of violence. Kahane was assassinated in New York in 1990, and the second group banned, Kahane Lives, was later established by his son, Ben- jamin. Baruch Goldstein, the Jewish settler who nned down 29 Muslims in a Hebron mosque .Feb. 25, was a follower of Kahane and had been elected on the Kach slate to the council of his West Bank settlement, Kiryat Arba. The cabinet, by a unanimous vote, de- +clared Kach and Kahane Lives terrorist groups and banned them under a 1948 law that was used against Jewish extremists in the early years of Israel's independence, but since 1960 has been directed entirely at Palestinians. FwUnder the law, members, supporters and Aancial backers of extremist groups can be prosecuted and imprisoned. The government ,cn confiscate the group's property, seize its bank accounts and close its offices. Ann Arbor mom fights for playground-safe clothing fF Members of the Jewish extremist group Kach realize the phones in their Jerusalem office no longer work after they were disconnected by Israeli authorities yesterday. ANN ARBOR (AP) - Thelma Sibley is collecting thousands of drawstrings cut off children's clothing along with signa- tures to match on a petition seeking to regulate children's clothing and play- grounds. "I used to read the safety boards at the doctor's office," Sibley said. "I knew about car seats and safety belts, but no one ever told me about drawstrings. "Now I have the information. I'm not going to stand before God and say I had the information and did not get it out." What Sibley knows about drawstrings is that they can kill. They killed her 5-year- old daughter. Nancy Sibley, an energetic kindergart- ner at Ann Arbor's Pittsfield Elementary School, died Jan. 5 after a drawstring on her parka caught on the school's spiral slide and strangled her. "I will go to my grave with a broken heart," she said. "But I don't want another family to go through this." Nancy would have been 6 years old last Saturday. Students, friends and supporters gathered Friday on the playground where Nancy died and released helium balloons in celebration of her birthday. Though Thelma Sibley's grieving is far from over, dedicating her time to changing clothing regulations is helping her deal with the loss. She is heading the campaign to get parents to cut drawstrings off their children's clothing and send them and pe- tition signatures to Hillary Rodham Clinton on March 25. The petitions ask the president's wife to, among other things: ® Require children's clothing manu- facturers to avoid drawstrings and other strangulation hazards. Distribute warnings about the dan- gers of drawstrings and playground equip- ment. Sibley is also supporting an effort to get the U.S. Consumer Products Safety Com- mission to push for safer design of play- ground equipment. The commission has begun an investi- gation of strangulations on slides as a result of recent incidents, including Nancy's death. And, as a result, it may establish mandatory safety regulations for manufac- turers of the playground equipment. On Saturday, Ann Arbor began tearing down 38 spiral and tubular slides at 21 schools after two other elementary school children became entangled on slides in late February, said Joyce Willis, district spokes- woman. Since the three incidents, hundreds of parents have voiced concerns about the slides' safety. They want the equipment replaced with safer alternatives, said Nathan Hodson, co-president of the Ann Arbor Schools PTO Council, which represents PTOs at 29 Ann Arbor schools. "Nancy's death and the other two acci- dents sent a shock wave through the dis- trict," said Hodson. Attorney General Michael Ben-Yair said yesterday's decision was based on his finding that "clear, conspicuous and continuing pat- terns of violence, or threats of violence, have been identified within the activities of these organizations and that they are liable to cause death or injury to individuals." In the past, Israeli officials have said the two organizations had only several hundred followers in Israel, and only several dozen hard-core activists. Both groups are believed to have financial backers in the United States. Two weeks ago, the cabinet authorized detention without trial for five Kach leaders, four of whom are now in custody, and order restrictions on the movement and weapons of 18 others. "We are appalled by the fascist decision of the government,which is typical for totalitarian regimes of long past," Kach spokesperson Elad Epstein told Israel Radio. He said Kach will appeal the decision to the courts. The decision came as Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin is trying to persuade the PLO to return to the negotiations on Palestinian self-rule. Rabin told reporters today that while the Hebron mas- sacre was carried out by "one Jewish murderer," the "backing that was given him lit all the red lights, and that is what brought us to makethis decision." Correction ,Fhe 24-hour Holocaust vigil will be on the Diag tomorrow at 11 a.m. This was incorrectly reported in Friday's Daily. I Group Meetings Q Comedy Company Writers' Meeting, University Activities Center, Michigan Union, 7p.m. Q Golden Key National Honor Society, Information tables, Michigan Union, Basement, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Q Ninjutsu Club, IM Building, Room G21, 7:30-9 p.m. J Rugby Practice, Coliseum, 8:30 n.m Room 2553, noon U Isis and Osins Week, Proud to be African: Spiritual and Cul- tural Origins of Ancient Egypt, sponsored by the Black Student Union, Business School, Hale Auditorium, 7 p.m. U Moving and Shipping Work- shop, International Center, Room 7, 4 p.m. U Recovering Emar, Gary Beckman. Adiunct Associate RCIA, 7 p.m.; 331 Thompson St. Student services Q 76-GUIDE, peer counseling phone line, call 76-GUIDE, 7 p.m.-8 a.m. Q Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info., 76-EVENT; film info.. 763-FILM I