The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 21, 1994 - 3 L Day: Diferences and Dissen eU'U' works to include BSU in planning By ZACHARY M. &AIMI Daily Staff Reporter 'though Martin Luther King Day is many months and snowfalls away, the University has begun lanning its daylong symposium This year's symposium marks a redoubled effort by the University to include Black students in planning the event, in an effort to avoid a repeat of last year's boycott by many Black students. ' Led by the Black Student Union, the boycott, which considered the University's events more academic than activist, received widespread attention. Following the boycott; Lester P. Monts, vice provost for academic and multicultural affairs, pledged in an open letter: "My office is committed to creating opportunities for people to ex- press their diverse ideologies and relate them to Dr. King and the ideals he represented." Preparation for this year's event began in January - almost immediately after last year's MLK Day - and the mposium planning committee was formed in March. It cently announced that Benjamin L. Hooks, former NAACP executive director, will be the keynote speaker. The University began officially recognizing Martin Luther King Day in 1989 after students, faculty and community members joined forces to stage a sit-in that called for the cancellation of classes in observance of the late African American leader. The purpose of Martin Luther King Day at the Univer- sity is "to recognize the contributions of one of the greatest Americans in American history," Monts said. C Since it began, the University has held a daylong symposium in place of regular classes and encouraged all its departments to hold additional programming, such as bringing speakers to campus - including now-Surgeon General Jocelyn Elders in 1993 - and holding panel discussions. But some University students, particularly BSU mem- bers, felt left out of the symposium's planning last year. Members said they were concerned with what they viewed as a shift away from activist pro- amming toward more academic- 'ented symposium speakers and topics. Last year's theme was 'Black si "'American Culture' or 'America the Multicultural: The Challenge were h of the 21st Century"' "The X3l994 Martin Luther inf lvOI King symposium fails to honor Q the history of activism out of which the symposium was cre- recogni ted," wrote last year s BSU eaker Alethea Gordon in a let- cainpu ter that appeared in The Michi- shOgld I gan Daily last January. "The University department involved that plans and promotes the sym- posium, the Office of the Vice plain Provost of Multicultural Affairs, has purposely forgotten Dr. King's community, offering prograIns that propose nothing more than aca- *mic rhetoric," Gordon wrote. - Members did not raise these Black Sti objections in previous years, said member an University alumna Shawn Mason- Spence, who served as vice- speaker for the BSU from Febru- ary 1991'to April 1992. "The sym- posium committee had a number of student representa- tives," Mason-Spence said, describing the committee at the time she attended the University. "There was a lot of opportunity for students to plan rganizational events in conjunction with University events," she added. "It was a collaborative effort. That's what seemed to go astray in recent years of the sympo- sium." Richard Mack, last year's BSU peace officer, said that "the BSU felt (last year) that the programming, particu- larly of the OAMI (Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives) office was not indicative of, and not rooted in, the activist history of Martin Luther King Day." So, in the spotlight of the local media, the BSU ,ycotted the symposium. The Boycott A group comprised of about 50 active members, the BSU is dedicated to promoting and sustaining a political, economic and cultural atmosphere for African Americans in the University community, said Theda Rogers, an LSA senior and active member. Since BSU members believed the University was not ' :' a l d meeting those standards during the MLK Day Sympo- sium, they abandoned the event, holding their own teach- ins in an effort to recapture the spirit they felt was lacking with the University's programs. Current BSU Speaker Nina Smith, and last year's speaker, Alethea Gordon, both declined to comment on the boycott. But many BSU members said they supported the BSU's actions. "I personally supported it," Mack said, "because as the Black nationalist principles of the Black Student Union dictate, I feel that student activists should play a primary role in the initiation and coordination of Martin Luther King Day." Did the boycott hurt the tradi- tion and purpose of Martin Luther King Day? uden s 1Mack says no. eaVily "We were not protesting the celebration of Martin Luther King 'ed ji Day itself. We were against how certain sectors of the University the day went about planning the day," he zed onsaid. ed O sa "We felt that as activists, we is. we should retain control of the day rooted in such activism," he said. e heavily Monts, whose office was singled out by the BSU for criti- cism, refused to comment about ahniglast year's MLK Day in an inter- view with the Daily on Wednes- n ,f day. The BSU learned a lesson from last year's boycott, said last year's 'heda Rogers publicity chair, Nerissa Marbury, udent Uon who remains active in the group. ident Union "We just can't hold the Univer- I LSA senior sity accountable for educating the African American students on cam- pus," she said. "We're going to hold ourselves accountable also," Marbury added. She said the BSU plans to hold teach-ins again this year. in the planning process," she added. Jones-Coleman said there were students of different ethnic groups on the committee, but they did not represent any student groups. MLK Day 1995 Under Jones-Coleman this year, the University ap- pears to be making an active attempt to consider the views of all students in the planning of the 1995 MLK Day Symposium, with the theme, "Conflict and Communities: The Struggle for Racial Justice." Jones-Coleman contacted numerous minority student group leaders and asked them to appoint a representative to the com- _ mittee. The 25-person committee is comprised of six students, four , faculty members and 15 staff mem- bers. The student representatives Comm include a Native American Stu- dents Association (NASA) mem- Creii ber, the vice president of the Black Greek Association and a represen- opport i tative from the BSU, Jones- Coleman said. ,osr "The BSU will hold a seat on expres the planning committee each year," Jones-Coleman said. He said the BSU's representa- tive, Nina Smith, is chairing the id group that is responsible for devel- relate th oping a 25th-anniversary com- memoration for the Black ActionK Movement (BAM). BAM began in the 1970s when a group of African American ac- L tivists began aggressively pursu- ing solutions to issues concerning V14 people of color at the University a and issuing demands to the admin- multic istration. Three BAMs have taken place, the most recent of which prompted the beginning of the MLK Day symposium at the University. But to Marbury, students are still not involved in all aspects of the planning. "We're more involved than we were last year," she said. "However, I won't say it's a major improvement." Marbury said the University asked Hooks to speak without consulting the BSU. "I personally don't agree with that," she said. But Jones-Coleman said the committee does not make decisions without a quorum of its members and that a BSU representative has been on the committee since its first meeting in April. Monts also would not comment on the University's relationship with the BSU. Other committee members report that the University is glad to have students involved. LSA senior and committee member Reno Ursal said University administrators "re- ally want student input." Ursal said he joined the committee to "make the program more representative of what the student body wants." NASA member Ryan LaLonde, an Art School sopho- more, joined the committee in March. He said the relation- at in i re Iil ce Members of the Black Student Union participate in the Unity March last January, protesting the University's Martin Luther King Day events. CHRIS WOLF/Daily ship between administrators and students has been equal. "Everybody is listened to." - He added, "They really want to know our opinions." Associate Dean of Students Joe Willis agreed with' Ursal. "Judging from the initial meeting, there's hope and interest that students will be an intimate part of the planning process," he said. "The students seemed to be receptive in terms of being included in the planning of Martin Luther King Day," he added. Representatives from other minority groups have alsd said they will be included in the program. Shannon Mar tin, the Native American representative at Minority Stu.K dent Services, said Dennis Banks, a strong Native Ameri- can advocate and founder of the American Indian Move- ment, will speak at the sympo- sium. Martin said that this year the ice is "OAMI and Minority Student Ser- vices came to work together as well as with students to design programming for the entire year and each of the four ethnic groups ki eS for (African Americans, Asian Ameri cans, Latino Americans and Na- le, to tive Americans). Under a tentative schedule, the rsymposium will begin Sunday, Jan. rs 15 with the Harlem Spiritual En- semble. Hooks' keynote address eS 00 d will take place at 10:30 a.m. the next day. The BSU will sponsor its In to Dr. annual Unity March. There will be two to four discussion panels, . planned by the subcommittees, but the themes have yet to be decided. Therewill also be a community- ~terP. N nts service event, but Jones-Coleman provost for did not yet know the specifics. The ademiC and symposium will close Monday Itural affairs evening, with the Sounds of Black- ness. Monts said events will be held all week. "If someone wants to get involved in the planning of Martin Luther King events," Monts said, "there is ample opportunity." Academics vS. Activism When asked if the committee is leaning toward an academic or activist focus, Jones-Coleman said neither. "We're trying instead to develop a very strong commemo- ration of Dr. King's life work that will always have an activist component and as a University there will be an academic component," he said. "In any commemoration honoring a civil rights hero - such as Dr. King - there will be and should be a component of activism. That's a piece of the civil-rights movement and it's one of Dr. King's missions that should not be forgotten," Jones-Coleman added. Mason-Spence agrees that activism should be present. "In the past when I was a University student, the activists present during the symposium were motivating, influen- tial and encouraging of student participation on a Univer- sity level," she said. Jones-Coleman would not say if he thought there would be a boycott this year, and BSU members said they did not know. Last Year's Planning Planning for last year's symposium did not begin until October, when Michael Jones-Coleman began his job at the University as a program associate with OAMI, which coordinates the MLK Day events. The majority of the planning occurred within the following three months. No BSU members were on the planning committee last year, Jones-Coleman said. But Mack said the BSU con- tacted University administrators to make its concerns known. "The OAMI was made aware of the concerns and volition of the BSU as to the content and the programming for the Martin Luther King Day," he said, adding that the BSU gave the University "ample time" to consider its concerns. Rogers agreed. "I was surprised that Black students weren't heavily solicited to be involved (last year)," she said. "Black students were heavily involved in getting the day recognized on campus, we should be heavily involved Keynote speaker Hooks worked for civil 9 nghts re than $1 billion to the Black nits. and ACT-SO. a nrogram U Organizers hail academic and multicultural affairs, gnid nhnnt Honkse- "He is nne of the protesting against discrimination. He was nrdained antist minister in the "He's internationally renowned in terms of his commitment to African gave mo commur