P'Er Unt Weather Tonight: Chance of a thunderstorm, mid 50s. Tomorrow: Chance of rain or flurries, low in mid 40s. One hundredfve years of editorialfreedom Friday February 23, 1996 I 4' >4* '41a'I I Inquiry " exammes Matlock iecient By Sam~ T. Dudek Daily Staff Reporter A Michigan State Police investigation into the events leading up to Saturday's arrest of John Matlock, director of the University's Office of Academic and Multicultural Initiatives, is currently un- derway at the University. ,Matlock, who has served as OAMI irector since 1989, was arrested for as- saulting a Department of Public Safety officer at the Central Campus Recreation Building. President James Duderstadt said Tues- day that the University has asked the Michigan State Police to investigate the matter. Garry Kregelka, Ypsilanti post com- mander for the State Police, said the in- tigation is underway. W'In order to avoid the appearance of a slanted investigation we were asked by Leo Heatley, the director at DPS, to in- vestigate this case," Kregelka said. "The claim is on x thepartof(Matlock) who claims the of- ficerdidn'tactprop- erly," Kregelka said. "The officer claimed he was 'y pushed." Despite the inci- dent, ProvostJ. Ber- nard Machen said he admired Matlock's contributions. "John is a valued member at the Office of Academic Affairs," he said. Matlock has been unavailable for com- ment since Tuesday. Staff at the OAMI office said yesterday that Matlock has *en out of the office for the past two 'days. Machen said the University did not ask Matlock to take time off and said Matlock's absence will not be problem- atic. OAMI staff said they expect him back today. In addition to the State Police investi- gation, the University's Police Grievance Committee is looking into the incident. Matlock said previously he was pushed aDPS officerupon entering the CCRB to judge a contest at the Black Volunteer Network's annual basketball tournament. A BVN member opened an exit door to allow Matlock to enter the sold-out event. "As soon as I stepped in, an officer pushed me and said, 'No one can come in this door.' As a reaction I lifted his hands and said, 'Don't touch me,"'"he said in an interview Tuesday. Matlock said he was never given the ance to identify himself as a BVN viser and was handcuffed and trans- ported to the DPS office on Kipke Drive. Accordingto DPS reports, officers were called to the scene by the CCRB building manager to close an over-capacity event. Associate Vice President for Univer- sity Relations Lisa Baker said she could not comment on the specifics of the case because of the current investigation. 2I' students rescued from blocked cave A group of University students, led by English Prof. William Alexander and San Francisco activist Richard Kamler, ran into the Law Library last night to protest the death penalty. The disturbance affected about 125 students. Students disrupt Law Librry with deathpenalty protest By Matt Buckley For the Daily A group of University students inter- rupted quiet studying in the Law Li- brary last night in a dramatized protest of the death sentence of a California man. English Prof. William Alexanderand San Francisco activist Richard Kamler organized the event, and the participat- ing students were enrolled in Alexander's University course, "The- ater and Social Change." The protest was in the form of a theatrical piece titled "Sound of Lions Roaring," created by Kamler and first displayed at Alcatraz in response to an earlier death sentence. Familiar with Kamler, Alexander wanted to bring the work to the University. "The idea dates back a couple of years, but it finally came to fruition this year," Alexander said. At about 9:30 p.m., several members of the group in the library stood on their chairs and pointed toward Alexander, who portrayed William Bonin. Bonin, responsible for the deaths of 14 young men in California, was scheduled to be executed by lethal injection at 3:01 a.m. last night. Alexander, standing in the midst of about 125 students in the library, began speaking to the crowd in the role of Bonin. During his speech, members of the group posed around Alexander, forming what participants called a "hu- man statue." Flashlights were used to enhance visual aspects of the perfor- mance, and sound speakers broadcasted an audio tape of roaring lions. Kamler said the presentation was devised to bring awareness to the death penalty. Kamler, Alexander and many students performing in the piece ex- pressed opposition to capital punish- ment. "Basically, I don't think there is ever a need to kill another person," said LSA senior Ben McDonough, who worked in the formation of the human statue surrounding Alexander. Many students in the Law Library stopped studying to watch the perfor- mance, which lasted for more than three minutes. Student reaction to the event was mixed. LSA first-year student Susanne Kalman said she thought the message could have been clearer. "(The presentation) didn't really get the point across," Kalman said. "It didn't give any feeling of why they were against (capital punishment)." Kinesiology first-year student Tomas Filipcik thought a larger crowd might have made the performance more ef- fective. "I think they should have done it in a place where there are more people," he said. Both Kalman and Filipcik said they were opposed to capi- tal punishment. Some performers said they felt that the crowd was hostile to the perfor- mance. Performer Erin Crowley, an LSA senior, said "there was a lot of hostility in the room towards the effort and the cause, but that doesn't mean that we didn't somehow give it visibility and recognition, which is what we were after." Killer prepared for execution SAN FRANCISCO(AP)-The man who was scheduled to be put to death early this morning for killing 14 young men said yesterday he'd "made peace with it" and was even able to joke with the warden as the execution approached. But "Freeay Killer" William Bonin figured he might be nervous as 3:01 a.m. drew nearer, "I think I've accepted the fact that this may come about and I've made my peace with it and if it happens, it happens." he said in an interview with KQED-FM. "As far as how I'm going to feel at that very moment, I can't answer that question. I don't know. I don't think any of us would know until we're there." Bonin, convicted of murdering 14 young men and boys in 1979 and 1980, said he's even been able to "sit around and joke" in recent days. But he conceded, "I might be ner- vous tomorrow (last) night." Kamler insisted that the group did not seek to immediately persuade the students, but rather to increase aware- ness of capital punishment. "We can't go on doing this kind of thing (carrying out the death penalty) - we' I have a bloodbath in this coun- try of people being executed," Kamler said. N Students in caving group were trapped by raging storm waters. By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Two University students drove to Kentucky last week to explore the 10th longest cave in the world. But Brian Davis and Leigh Ann Vaughn, who planned to return to Ann Arbor on Tuesday, were trapped in the cave until late last night after heavy rains blocked the passageway. "The University has confirmed that they are students," said Department of Public Safety director Leo Heatley. "Two of them are Ph.D. candidates." Heatley said News and Information Services had contacted him about the situation. The students traveled with five other members of the Detroit Urban Grotto Club, a local caving group. Their mis- sion: to map the Fisher Ridge Cave, a 70 to 80 mile-long group of caverns in Munfordville, located in the western part of Kentucky. All seven explorers are from southeastern Michigan. During the exploration, the group split up, Kentucky State Police said last night. Tuesday, two explorers who, had separated from the group emerged, but the other five, including the two students, remained in the cave. Larry Bean, a Livonia resident who got out Tuesday, indicated that the cave's exitway may have been blocked by the 1 1/2 inches of rain that fell last weekend. Bean and another explorer re-en- tered the cave yesterday to locate the rest of their group. The entire group emerged from the cave last night when the rains began to recede from the passageway. Around 6 p.m. the first caver, Peter Quick, exited and said his colleagues were not in danger. "The leader of the team came crawl- ing out at about 6," said John Grace, a Kentucky Emergency and Disaster Services officer. "Within another few hours, all of them will come out." At 9 p.m., state police said all of the cavers were safe and on dry land. "They are all OK," police said. No- body was hospitalized, DPS said. Grace said the owners of the pri- vate land where the cave is located were the first to notice the cavers were trapped. "The people who own the property keep a log of who goes in there and when they should come out," he said. "They didn't come out on time." Vaughn's housemate, who did not want to be identified, said he expected Vaughn to return Tuesday. He also *Louisville KENTUCKYA 100 miles TENN 100 km N.C. said Vaughn explores caves as a rec- reational activity. The Kentucky State Police did not call the situation an emerg'ency, but stated that the explorers "were just overdue." Bean's wife, Cathy, said the group of experienced cavers was well-pre- pared and could have remained in the cave for a few more days if necessary. "They have never got caught by the water before," shewsaid in an inter- view last night with The Michigan Daily. "But they know there is that chance. "They have enough food and water to last a couple of days. They also have sleeping bags." She said the explorers set up a base camp in the cave. The camp was a five-hour walk from the "sump," an area where the rain collected. The sump is about three hours from the cave's exit, making it an eight-hour trip from the base to the outside world. Cathy Bean guessed that the cavers remained in theabase camp during the past few days, and went to the sump periodically to check if the rains had receded. "You can't get in or out of the cave when the sump is filled up so they were stuck in the cave," Grace said. Grace said the explorers did not know it had rained - or that they were trapped in the cave - until they tried to exit earlier in the week. Late last night, The Associated Press reported that Ann Arbor resi- dent Joe Meppelins and Eric Fehlalier of Northville were among the five who emerged from the cave. Students were trapped in a Munfordviie, Ky. CND, cave yesterday. I LL. Trapped in Fisher Ridge Cave Two University students were trapped in a portion of the 70 to 80 mile-long group of caverns that make up the Fisher Ridge Cave, in Munfordville, Ky. Expected to return on Tuesday, the cavers emerged last night after rains blocked their exit. 1Bosnian ambassador visits 'U,' calls for greater justice By Rajal Pitroda For the Daily More than 100 students and members of the Arbor community gathered in the Hussey Mom of the Michigan League last night, to attend a forum on the War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Dr. Nedzib Sacirbey, ambassador-at-large for the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, deliv- ered the evening's keynote address. Sacirbey said he believes in seeking justice as a means ofachiev- ing peace. "We are not asking for discourse in Bosnia, and we are not asking for revenge," Sacirbey said. e are asking for concern for human beings and or justice." Sacirbey attributed the start ofthe warto people who promote hate on the basis of simple differ- ences, and to people that learn not to understand, but to separate. "These people believe that Muslims, Catholics and Greek Orthodoxes cannot live together," attempting to exterminate both them and that which they have erected." University of Florida Prof. Paul Magnarella, who also worked in the Tribunal, stressed the importance of the Tribunal's promotion of hu- manitarian law. "Our situation is close to that of the Holocaust,"Magnarella said. "The purpose of the Tribunal is to bring alleged criminals to justice for the aristocracies against humanity." Magnarella said that thus far, 52 people have been indicted for war crimes, 45 of whom are Serbian. But Serbian and Croatian non-compli- ance has allowed these men to roam free, even serving in their nations' militaries, he said. University Law student Corinne Vorenkamp, who has worked with rape victims in the former Yugoslavia, discussed the importance ofa witness protection program for survivors of sexual assault. "I have seen young women come forward and tell their stories, and the retelling re-enacts their trauma," Vorenkamp said. "They think that ifthey tell their stories, people in the West will notice, Nursing prof. wins Golden Apple By Anupama Reddy Daily Staff Reporter Thesearch is over for the 1996 Annual Golden Apple award-winner. Studentschose School of Nursing Prof. Carol Boyd in an open-ballot system organized by Students Honoring Out- standing University Teaching. Students had to nominate "the professor whose last lecture they would most like to hear," said SHOUT chair Michael Kraut. Award-winners receive a cash prize of $1,000 and the opportunity to deliver his or her "last lecture," he said. "Boyd is the first woman and the first non-LSA professor to be chosen," Kraut said. "Also this year (former University president) Robben Fleming will be ad- dressing the audience." Boyd said the award meant more emo- tionally to her than a grant or research funding. "Weggive gifts from the mind all the Boyd time, but (this award) is a gift from the heart," Boyd said. "The honor comes from students giving y i m 1 i