2A - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 16, 1995 CLINTON Continued from Page 1A a statement. ~3orders is expecting hundreds of people to attend the event. "I'm imagining it's going to be a very large crowd," said Dallas Moore, community relations coordinator for Borders. -"We've ordered a lot of books." For security precautions, fans will stand in line to wait to briefly speak to Clinton individually or in small groups. The public will not be allowed to take photos. "There's very high security surround- ing the President and first lady," Moore s'dt in a statement. "This is really dif- ferent than anything we've done before in the store." The book tour comes in the midst of controversy over Clinton's role in the travel office firings and Whitewater. Yesterday, Clinton said her remarks regarding the travel office could have been miscon- strued. -She said she did not order the dismissal of seven travel office eiployees although her conversa- tions with presidential aides could have "unintentionally" prompted tlm. - The Associated Press contributed to this report. Across nation, MLK remembered through marches and speeches The Associated Press Preaching racial unity from Martin Luther King Jr.'s pulpit in Atlanta, Presi- dent Clinton said yesterday the slain civil rights leader would find his dream unfulfilled today. "He would say to us, 'You've still got a ways to go,"' the President said. "We have to continue to heal the racial divisions that still tear at our nation," Clinton said during the pre- eminent ceremony for King commemo- rations across the country. The President waited three hours to speak, visibly enjoying the lengthy, lively memorial to the civil rights activ- ist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate who would have turned 67 yesterday. King was killed April 4, 1968. Observances elsewhere ranged from somber to festive, some focused on ordinarypeople, others on national lead- ers. Del Charles, organizer of a march in Little Rock, Ark., said Shriners, Ma- sons, classic cars and anyone who wanted to couldjoin the parade because King believed in inclusion. "That's Central High School," he said, nodding toward the band from the school that was an integration battle- ground. At a church scarred by the federal building bombing last April in Okla- homa City, the disaster only reinforced King's message. "Those who perpetuated this crime against those 19 beautiful children and those wonderful adults did not know his ideas," said Dr. Jihad Ahmad, a local civil rights leader. In Philadelphia, where retired Gen. Colin Powell led a ceremonial ringing ofthe Liberty Bell, some 70 high school students spent a "day on" working in various community service projects. "Nothing would have frustrated Mar- tin more than people supposedly honor- ing him by sitting at home watching TV or sleeping late," said former Sen. Har- ris Wofford, who now runs the Corpo- ration for National Service. Several hundred people marched through downtown Memphis, Tenn., to theNational Civil Rights Museum,built around the Lorraine Motel where King was assassinated. Others gathered at a Memphis park named for King beside the Mississippi River. "I grew up in this neighborhood, but I couldn't even come up in this park," said resident Aretha King. "Now my grandchildren can play here." In St. Louis, teacher Marabeth Gen- try said this year's observance was tinged with sadness. "It seems like we are going backwards, instead of forward," Gentry said. "But they say sometimes you have to step back before you can move forward." Many at the observance in down- town St. Louis said they believed the O.J. Simpson trial and his acquittal on murder charges had racially divided the country. "We need to love each other," said Cecil McBriar of Springfield. "Look each other in the eye. Help each other. We're all part of the human race, black or white or green or yellow." A white supremacist who wanted to "congratulate" New Hampshire for not adopting a legal Martin Luther King Jr. holiday accused the state yesterday of allowing 200 angry protesters to shout him down. Against all odds, Hussein stays in power AMMAN, Jordan - On Jan. 17, 1991, ferocious allied air raids launched a U.S.-led offensive to drive Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait and out of power. Five years later, a defiant Hussein is still president of Iraq and his bitterstandoffwith the world shows no sign of abating. While the Iraqi leader has proved to be a stubborn survivor, the 20 million Iraqi people are becoming poorer and hungrier. r In the United States and elsewhere, analysts still debate whetherthe U.S.-ledcoalition shouldhavetriedtooust Hussein after driving his forces from Kuwait in a six-week war. Even former President Bush said his administration may Hussein have mishandled Iraq's surrender. If done differently, he said in an interview to be aired today on PBS, Hussein might not still be in power. "I miscalculated," Bush said. "I thought he'd be gone." The war and the U.N. trade embargo imposed five days after Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990 have deprived Hussein of the oil revenues and the military muscle that fueled his dreams of becoming the paramount leader of the Arab world. Hussein has imposed austerity measures in an attempt to halt the econor@ decline that has beggared the once-prosperous nation. 7L T~ AVW I INTENSIVE COURSE A ELDERS Continued from Page IA - violence on the streets.' Elders said she will not return to Washington, but she will continue to brave the political storm and stand up for her beliefs, despite often fierce opposition. "If I had to have my lips clamped to be there, then I don't want to be there," she said. Like King, Elders entered college when she was just 15 years old. She graduated at 18 and became the only black woman to graduate from the University of Arkansas medical school in 1960. Elders has returned to her former position as a tenured pro- fessor there. Plane crashes i Idaho, kiling 8 MALAD CITY, Idaho- rate plane carrying four Co tling executives to a sa crashed and burned in a c yesterday, killing all ei aboard. The twin-engine turbo-p ing from Salt Lake City t Idaho, when it went down overcast weather two-third into the 150-mile trip. Air traffic controller Mitsubishi MU-2B make scent on radar screens, a reported an unspecified eme Mitch Barker, a Federal A ministration spokesman. The wreckage was found ofacanyon10milesnorthw The cause of the crash investigation. Oneida County Sheriff B it appeared the plane nose-d ground and, given the poin authorities assume the plan to turn around, away fromf Columbia Review INTENSIVE MCAT PREPARATION CLASSES NOW FILLING! n - A corpo- ca-Cola bot- les meeting anyon early ght people rop was fly- A crater about 5 feet deep and 12 feet across marked the spot where authorities believe the plane struck. A portion of a propeller, an engine and a large section of the fuselage were all that were distin- guishable amid the wreckage. Pentagon seeks 11 Korean war POWs o Pocatello, WASHINGTON-Pentagon inves- in calm but tigators believe that four former Ameri- Is of the way can soldiers who defected from their units in South Korea in the 1960s are rs saw the now living in communist North Korea, a rapid de- a U.S. defense official said yesterday. nd the pilot The official, who spoke on condi- ergency, said tion of anonymity, also said the Penta- viation Ad- gon was pursuing unconfirmed intelO gence leads that as many as 11 Ameri- d at the base cans taken prisoner in the 1950-53 estofMalad. Korean War were still alive in the was under North. The intelligence leads emerged in the ill Neal said late 1980s, but until now the Pentagon ived into the has not commented publicly on them. it of impact, The four Americans the Pentagon e was trying believes are living in North Korea have Pocatello. no connection with the Korean War, I SEALE Continued from Page 1A Amendment to the Constitution deal- ing with private property," Seale said. This emphasis on education and knowledge of the law is particularly important for students, said Stephen Bates, an Engineering sophomore. "Be prepared for any kind of situa- tion," Bates said. Years after the organization's hey- day, Seale is still fighting - but now his fight is to protect the reputation and image of the Black Panther party. Formed in Oakland, Calif. to stop ra- cial oppression by the police and pro- mote equal justice for African Ameri- cans in the 1960s, the party is por- I 1 ..> ~~ i - There must be some way to avoid doi the same thing for the next orty years. Life's been pretty good so far. You've different areas? sional Education in St. Charles. kept moving-taken all the right Andersen Consulting offers you Illinois, is just one measure of our steps along the way (for the most the opportunity to work on a variety commitment. We train you for a part). And now you're ready for the of projects-with clients in a wide career-not justa job. biggest step. range of industries. Does the idea of forty years of You'll be getting your degree from We are the leader in helping knowing exactly what you'll be doing a top school. You're about to find a organizations apply information each week scare you? Then don't great job. technology to their business advan- settle for that. Demand challenge The question is: which job? And tage. Every hour of every business and variety. Come talk to us. And will it have the potential to interest day, we implement a solution to help find out more about a career with you for a whole career? one of our more than 5,000 clients Andersen Consulting. You've probably heard the story of worldwide. the job applicant who said he was a What makes that possible is the shoe salesman with fifteen years expe- quality of our people. And the quality A N DERSEN rience. "No;' corrected the recruiter of our training. We're known for both. interviewing him, "you've had six Because business and tech- months experience thirty times." nology are ever-changing, we see Isn't there some way to keep training as a continuing process. And ARTHUR ANDERSEN & CO, s.C. __,- __..__- ,, (w), _m -ant rfnr sf- trayed differently than Seale remem- bers it, he said. The release of "Pan- thers," a movie about the group, has raised questions as to the Panthers' leadership and tactics. "We grew out of a college cam- pus, grew out ofa young black intel- ligentsia," he said. "To pass off this crap as authentic and to treat Huey (Newton) and me as street gang lead- ers is to cater to racist low-life ex- cursion." Seale's presentation drew more than 800 people, although only about 700 were allowed into the Michigan Union Ballroom. Organizers filled the room beyond its capacity and took precau- tions to avoid the uncomfortable situ- ations of last year's overcrowding, Miller said. PANEL Continued from Page 1A the subject, and Hewitt and Wainess said that they knew very few students who attended the MLK Day events. Still, Walton was optimistic about the symposium's turnout, and said that change is never instituted by a majority. "You're never going to get every- body committed," he said. Waltonnoted that during King's 1963 march on Washington, about 250,000 showed up while more than 400,000 blacks lived in Washington at the time. SometimesWalton noted,asmall group can be very influential. "At moments of history, crisis mo- ments, extraordinary individuals pop up," Walton said. Matlock said that the college years are often times when students emerge as leaders. They are also times when students undergo the most change as developing individuals, he said. Hewitt said that being the only mi- nority student at an all-white high school influenced him upon entering the Uni- versity. But after a positive experience with his white RA during his first year, he said, "Well, there is hope. It's not ev- erybody out to get you." But coming together is not as easy as changing a curriculum, several panel- ists pointed out. Differences in social practices were also cited as blocks to black-white friendships. Matlock joked that Wainess might mean well in inviting him to the bar for a few drinks, but explained that blacks generally don't socialize at bars. "When we talk about interaction, on whose turf?" Matlock asked. "Who's expected to change?" Prisoner exchange in Bosnia falls through BOCAC, Bosnia-Herzegovina - A prisoner swap meant to demonstrate the will for reconciliation among Bosnia's hostile factions fizzled yesterday. Only nine people were freed instead of the hundreds expected. The failure, four days before the Jan. 19 deadline for all prisoners of war to be freed under the Dayton peace agree- ment, displayed the lingering enmity and mistrust that threatens the peace pact. As in the past, the main stumbling block was government insistence that Serbs account for thousands of missing people. "No agreement has been made about the release with the Serb side" because the Serbs refuse to say what happened to 24,742 people whose names have been handed to them, said Amor Masovic, the Bosnian government offi- cial charged with overseeing POW ex- changes. Masovic said 4,000 of those are thought to be prisoners. The fate of others is unknown. They include thou- sands of people who disappeared in 1992 as the Serbs swept through north- ern and eastern Bosnia, expelling, im- prisoning and killing Muslims. Ailing Greek premier resigns ATHENS, Greece-Premier Andreas Papandreou resigned yesterday after nearly two months in the hospital, at last making way for his Socialist party to elect anew premier and resolveGreece's worsening leadership crisis. Forweeks, doctors hadacknowledged what Papandreou, 76, had not: Evenif he does come off a life-support systeW he will never recover well enough to handle the duties of his office. Opposition lawmakers had written to Papandreou asking him to resign, but Socialist ministers, afraid of being ac- cused of taking advantage of a sick old man, have been paralyzed on the issue. Under the constitution, Papandreou could be replaced only if he died or resigned. Papandreou decided to re- sign yesterday after meeting with hi doctors. - From Daily wire services Th iciganibil5Oii tsb iloo, -'i -rispuvlii3,iwMik th vouh....r...o lay ,,1. theSTal.ana winter.termsD students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fail term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 circulation 764-0558; classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. 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