The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 28, 1994 - 3 *Pow wow bnngs song, dance to Ann Arbor *By SAM T. DUDEK DAILY STAFF REPORTER Crisler Arena was filled this week- end with the sounds of drums beating and people cheering, but there was not a basketball in sight. Hundreds gathered for the 22nd annual Ann Arbor Pow Wow, a three- day celebration of Native American culture, song and dance. The pow wow, sponsored by the Native American Student Associa- tion (NASA) and Minority Students Services (MSS), is called the "Dance for Mother Earth." The annual event was highlighted by colorful dancers and rhythmic singers from all Native American tribes. Dancers and singers from Michi- gan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Okla- boma, Ontario and every other corner of North America participated in this year's event, which began Friday and concluded last night. Along with these performers and competitors, Native craftspeople filled the Crisler corridors, selling authentic arts and crafts. The pow wow began with the Grand Entry. Dressed in colorful and decorative outfits, 354 dancers en- tered the arena dancing to the sounds of the 17 drum groups that circled the dancing floor. After the entry, songs were sung to honor the flags, to unite different tribes and to honor Native American veter- ans. President James J. Duderstadt was on hand to take part in the festivities. Speaking in the pow wow's opening ceremonies, he thanked MSS Native American Rep. Michael Dashner and NASA, the event's organizers. Duderstadt also reminded the Critics of Clinton call aide's angry reaction 'normal' SARAH WHITING/Daily A dancer from the pow wow shows his dancing prowess Friday night. The pow wow took place over the weekend. crowd of the debt the University owes to Native Americans for the founda- tion of the institution. As mentioned in the pow wow program, the University was estab- lished in 1817 on land donated to the state by the Ojibwe, Odawa, Podewatomi and Wyandotte peoples. The dancers, performing both in exhibitions and competitions, dis- played their spectacular skill with exciting and rhythmic dances as a means of celebration and worship. "The dancing was so lively," said Rachel Freeman, a first-year LSA stu- dent. "It was fun to watch. "I loved it," she went on to say. "I love the Native American dancing and their uniforms. I think it was a great experience." Along with a dancing competition, the drum groups participated in their own contest. The groups circled around their drums, singing traditional Native American songs, to which the dancers performed. "I was totally intrigued by every- thing there," said LSA sophomore Cathleen Eckholm. "The vendors, the dancers, the songs and the way they dressed was all beautiful." After all the dancing was complete, prizes were awarded to the top five dancers in each category. Categories were divided by age and style. Once the prizes were awarded, winners and non- winners alike danced one final dance to conclude the,"Dance for Mother Earth." Dashner, exhausted from the three- day gathering he coordinated, said he was pleased with this year's pow wow. "I thought it went great," he said. THE WASHINGTON POST WASHINGTON - The leading Republican critic of President Clinton's involvement in Whitewater yesterday said the angry White House reaction to the appointment of a partisan Republi- can to investigate civil cases for the Resolution Trust Corp. was "pretty natural" and too much should not be made of it. Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) said it would be "premature to draw any ex- traordinary conclusions" about a phone call senior White House adviser George Stephanopoulos made in February to Joshua Steiner, chief of staff at the Treasury Department. Sources have described Stephanopoulos as angrily asking Steiner how the RTC came to name former federal prosecutor Jay B. Stephens to investigate possible civil cases against Madison Guaranty Sav- ings & Loan and whether that hiring could be reversed. Stephens, aformer Republican U.S. attorney for the District, of Columbia, was sharply critical of Clinton when the president fired him as part of the removal of all the U.S. attorneys who were appointed by the Bush adminis- tration. Stephens also has considered running for political office. He was hired by the RTC in early February, and among the cases the agency is examining for a possible civil action is the Rose Law Firm's repre- sentation of Madison before Arkansas regulators. Hillary Rodham Clinton, then a partner at Rose and a partner in the Whitewater Land Development Co. with her then-governor husband and James B. McDougal, who owned Madi- son, asserted to the state regulators that Madison was on the road to financial health. It later collapsed, requiring a $60 million taxpayer bailout. Leach, the senior Republican on the House Banking Committee who is leading the GOP charge onWhitewater, told NBC's "Meet the Press" yesterday that the Stephanopoulos phone call "may have been a mistake" but he added, "I hope we don't make too much of this part of the story." Instead, Leach pressed for a full congressional investigation of the rela- tionship between Madison and Whitewater. Leach has maintained that Whitewater and Madison were so in- tertwined that the Clintons ended up with financial benefits from Madison even as it was collapsing and their Whitewater land development was fail- ing. The president maintains he lost $46,000 on Whitewater. Leach's benign view of the Stephanopoulos conversation, first re- ported Saturday in The Washington Post, was backed by House Speaker Thomas S. Foley (D-Wash.) and, per- haps unexpectedly, by another former official, Marlin Fitzwater, the press secretary to President George Bush. "I have to admit that if you stand in George Stephanopoulos' shoes, it would be a little difficult not to be surprised and outraged by that appoint- ment" of Stephens, Fitzwater told a C- SPAN interviewer. Fitzwater called the angry reaction "pretty normal," echo- ing White House Counsel Lloyd Cutler's terminology - "perfectly natural" - in describing the move. Stephanopoulos has said he called Steiner, a longtime friend, to ask how the appointment had ocurred and to vent some anger. When Steiner told him that nothing could be done about appointments by an independent regu- latory agency, Stephanopoulos said, that was the end of the discussion. "I don't think there is any evidence they tried to get rid of Jay Stephens,', Foley said yesterday, adding, as Cutler had said, that it would be "natural" for the White House to be concerned about the appointment. In retrospect, he said, White House aides may have failed to display "good political judgment" in their handling of the unfolding Whitewater problem, but he lamented an atmosphere in which virtually ev- erything the White House does on the' issue has become suspect. Foley said he expects the'House will hold hearings on Whitewater as early as May, and Leach said, "I think this query should proceed forthrightly and hopefully can be put behind us in a month or two." White House officials have been resigned to a more drawn-out process: going into summer and would be ec-s static, at this point, to have Whitewater behind them in a month or two. The reports of contacts between White House and Treasury officials over the issue produced a series of subpoenas by Robert B. Fiske Jr., the special coun- sel named to conduct the Whitewater inquiry. Treasury officials, plus eight White House officials, have appeared before Fiske's grandjury in the last two weeks. After weeks of resistance, Democratic leaders in both Houses have agreed to hearings on the issue. Yesterday, Leach adhered to his previous assessment that the: Whitewater affair is not about impeach- ment and should not be about criminal charges against the Clintons. Journalist discusses his experiences in S. Africa CRY BUNNY * By MARIA KOVAC DAILY STAFF REPORTER Bruce Finley is taking a break from the pressures of a journalism career, but he's not taking it easy. The Northwestern graduate who has worked at various publications across the country, including the Denver Post, is spending this year through a fellow- ship at the University as a journalist in O residence at the Business school. "The purpose is to let (journalists) study and reflect for ayear and develop other interests," Finley said. Finley's main interest has become the people of South Africa. He made a presentation Friday at the School of Education on his experiences while in Africa. The small, informal lecturewas part of a series sponsored by the South African Initiative Office. During Finley's two trips to Africa in 1991 and 1992, his goal was to "use journalistic interview techniques" to interview ordinary South African people, he said. Finley said he believes that "ac- cessing the situation in South Africa will depend on understanding ordinary citizens." "The real gap in our knowledge (of South Africa) is in the unseen, un- 'The real gap in our knowledge (of South Africa) is in the unseen, unheard individual.' Bruce Finley journalist in residence heard individual,"Finley said. Through all his interviews, Finley claims he has found several common threads running through the South Af- rican people. He said he sees "an untapped entre- preneurial energy" in the people. He shared slides of the small business ven- dors in the poor streets of Soweto as evidence of such energy. Finley also notices "a hunger for education." He told of a South African family saving all the money they could to send their children to private schools in Pretoria in order to prepare for univer- sity educations. Finley's lecture ended with com- ments and questions from the small gathering in attendance which proved to hold mixed reactions about his pre- sentation. JOE WESTRATE/Daiiy A mother attempts to have her nervous child sit on the Easter Bunny's lap at Briarwood Mall yesterday. McPhail speaks to local high school students on women's issues at 'U' Dental school By PATRICIA MONTGOMERY DAILY STAFF REPORTER Even though she lost the 1994 De- troitmayorial election, Sharon McPhail says the race is not over. McPhail had not decided if she will run in the 1998 mayoral elections, but she said she believes a Black woman should be in the race, she told a group of Washtenaw County high school stu- dents Saturday morning at the Univer- sity Dental school. The presenters of the event, the leadership conference and workshops, were the "Sistahs Leading The Next Generation" and The University Mentorship Office. Devon Archer, the coordinator of Saturday's function said, "The New Leadership Project is a conference to get high school students involved (more) in leadership positions, par- ticularly, public policy. What we want them to come away with today is to envision themselves as leaders and to gain some leadership skills." Archer said she has spoken with Lester Monts, director of the Office of Academic and Multicultural Initiatives, and has urged Monts to "institutional- ize" the New Leadership Project to make the program a yearly event. African American women should run for government office because of discrimination in the criminal justice system, McPhail said. This belief was one of her reasons for running for mayor of Detroit. "Detroit's debt is $2.25 billion," McPhail said. Reducing Detroit's defi- cit, she said, will be difficult because the handling of the debt is like "a ship without a compass." She said former Mayor Coleman Young "needed to be replaced because Coleman wasn't concerned with women's issues like child care, but he was a good man." "Archer's downfall is promising everybody everything," she warned. Already politically active in their high schools, the women at the confer- ence were selected either by their aca- demic counselors or their Black Stu- dent Union advisers. During work- shops, students shared their aspirations and identified with their heroines. Pioneer sophomore Sonja Jordan said, "I'm not going to think solely of myself but think of others by reaching out to them." McPhail wasted no time in getting the message over to her audience. She compared widespread institutional dis- crimination to the "big block." "Getting past the big block," she said, "the block that keeps us from doing things (because) we have been taught 'you can't be the dentist, the editor, the mayor."' She criticized the media for stereo- typing Black women. Even though Black women have taken a larger role in the media recently, "historically the media has been less pleasant," she said. In addition, McPhail said, "More needs to be done about women getting the least from their efforts, the most abused group of people in society who have the deepest feeling for others and research shows that!" McPhail's pivotal point forAfrican American women is "don't be self- aggrandizing"-once a Black woman reaches success she should help others, particularly other Black women, to suc- ceed. q 10111KG HILLS / GOLF COURSE NINE CHALL7ENGING HOLES -Zoe* voo OrannEEE Mma*Iu~f-a FFota f'nmnm,. Tnft ms nn 'at,. I