'Elan Untt onight: Snow showers likely, ow in the lower 20s. omorrow: Snow likely, high iround 23°. One hundred six years of editorlfreedom Wednesday January 22, 1997 $45 OK allocated for diversity programs -Katb Wang ay StaffReporter With less than two weeks remaining in his erm as interim University president, Homer eal launched a new initiative Monday to pro- diversity at the University. e initiative, called the President's New entury Fund for Diversity, will allocate 50,000 to new programs that will "accelerate e University's progress toward the many- aceted goals for diversity at the U-M." "It is time to reach new understandings of how work environments, living environments, and learning environments are enriched when diversity is productively engaged," Neal said. "If we are to reach the highest levels of understand- ing and action, our efforts must come together in new and different ways so that the aspirations of all members of the University are realized. "With this fund, we will continue to address the needs of our students and the citizens of our state," he said Guidelines for the allocation of the funds and the programs will be established next month, said Lisa Tedesco, presidential associate for spe- cial programs and a Dentistry professor. Although Neal will not be University president once the fund begins operation, President-select Lee Bollinger has lent his support to the initiative and will continue to oversee its implementation. "To me, it is inconceivable that an academic higher education institution would not engage in special efforts to ensure that women and minori- ties are well represented in the institution and felt that gender and race didn't matter," Bollinger said. Michigan Student Assembly President Fiona Rose applauded the initiative's monetary com- mitment, but said there is still more ground to cover toward achieving equality. "I am positive about this initiative, but we must remember the path toward equality is a long one and this is one step of many that needs to be taken, Rose said. The funds for the initiative will be drawn from the Presidential Initiative Fund, which serves as a monetary resource for University presidents to create and stimulate projects at their discretion. Former University President James Duderstadt used this fund to support the Career Development Program for Women, a project he unveiled in August 1994. It was also Duderstadt who initiated the Michigan Mandate and the Michigan Agenda for Women, two programs aimed at increasing minority and female enrollment at the University. Since the Michigan Mandate was launched in 1987, minority student enrollment at the University has more than doubled. Minority students now comprise 25.4 percent See FUND, Page 7 A/LK III continues e dream S By Alice Robinson y Staff Reporter When he was 5 years old, Martin Luther King III got his first taste of national attention. All because of one little speech. "I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character," his father said to an energized crowd in Washington, D.C., on Aust 28, 1963. sterday, the second oldest child of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King visited campus to help make the University's annual MLK Day symposium a success. King spent the afternoon addressing a crowd of about 135 people at the Alumni Center and later participated in a dinner and dialogue with students at the Michigan League. Twenty-five student leaders were invited to the dinner, sponsored by the Martin Luther King Jr. Committee for Health Sciences and the Office of Multi- Ethnic Student Affairs. Martin Luther King 'zring the afternoon presentation, King stressed the need for the continuation of his father's mission and pinpointed problems that trouble him. He also briefly stressed the need King said his father's three main concerns were poverty, racism and violence in America. Referring back to his father's famous dream speech, King emphasized the need to make the "dream" a reality. ".Sometimes dreams come true, but in mtost cases dreams are. something we go through when we are asleep, King said. is father approached all people with dignity and kind- By Meg Exley nW, King said. "Actually he was a friend to anybody. Daily Staff Reporter Anybody he ever came into contact with," King said with a "One day is n subtle smile on his face. message conveye The younger King, former commissioner of Fulton day after the Uni County, Ga., has worked to advance his father's ideals honoring Martin L through the creation of various programs. During the late A coalition of 1970s, he represented President Carter's administration on from several m humanitarian missions to foreign countries. In 1984, he cre- joined together to ated the Africa Initiative, aimed at curbing starvation in faction with the s Africa. the MLK Day symi King now dedicates his time to Leadership 2000, an orga- Proclaiming y tion that trains business leaders and elected officials on Without Diversil l ership and diversity issues. encouraged to wea During the 45-minute lecture, King urged college stu- over their mouth dents to mobilize for change, citing examples of student their classes. This activism from the civil rights movement. "The Freedom was a gesture me Riders who rode buses in 1961 ... to desegregate inter- need to silence dis state transportation nationwide were also students," King race issues among said. administration. "I think it's important to understand the power that you as Volunteers pass students have in this country," he said. cloth and explana In addition, King touched on other current issues includ- Hall from 9 a.m. to iEbonics, affirmative action and the prevalence of vio- "gagged" students See KING, Page 2 ly though handwri N : UP Z @ 1Ik.. _ ;; N _. .. MARGARET MYERS/Daily Ill signs an autograph to University alum and community activist Audrey Jackson at the Alumni Building yesterday. tents protest Wore diversity ot enough" was the d yesterday - the versity's celebration Luther King Jr. University students ulticultural groups express their dissatis- short-term effects of aposium. yesterday "A Day ly," students were r white strips of cloth s and sit silently in symbolic "gagging" eant to illustrate the shonest discussion of both students and the ed out the strips of tory fliers at Angell o 2 p.m. Many of the communicated sole- tten notes. "The main point of the protest was to simply confront the issue," said RC senior Nora Salas, a member of Alianza. "We wanted to demonstrate to people who may think this is a diverse place just how many people of color they actually talk to in a single day." Engineering sophomore Lucy Arellano expressed similar concerns. "People on campus need to realize what this campus would be like without the people of color," she said. Organizers of the "Day Without Diversity" said they were concerned that the annual MLK Day symposium has become a masquerade for contin- ued discrimination against communi- ties of color at the University. Organizers claim that the symposium is simply a politically correct celebra- tion of diversity, but fails to honor the activism of Martin Luther King Jr. him- See DIVERSITY, Page 7 Possible arson hits Mason By Ajit K. Thavarajah Daily Staff Reporter A fire on the second level of Mason Hall early yesterday morning caused extensive damage and is sus- pected to have been started intention- ally. The Department of Public Safety and Ann Arbor Fire Department are currently working together to discover the origin of the fire, which damaged the Office of Student Resource Information. "We are investigating it as an arson," said Elizabeth Hall, a DPS spokesper- son. The fire occurred at 3:45 a.m. and was put out by 5:30 a.m., she said. Flames destroyed the main Student Resource Information office - a branch of the Office of Student Affairs - and Prof. Robert Wallin's office. "I was told by the Ann Arbor Fire Department that a few individuals had been seen in the vicinity and were questioned but they had noth- ing concrete," said Wallin, who directs the LSA Checkpoint publica- tion. "The ceilings were burned out in both offices. Luckily the fire was mainly contained in my office and the main office. Other offices only See FIRE, Page 2 A CLUP celebrates landmark decision By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter On this day 24 years ago, women's rights activists scored a major victory while pro-life advocates suffered a loss - Roe vs. Wade. Tonight, the University chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and Students for Choice will celebrate the controversial decision that defined abortion as a woman's constitutional right. State Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Salem Twp.) will present a speech about the case and its impact. "We want to equate the stu- dents with the debate for repro- ductive liberty," said Ilona Cohen, president of the University's ACLU chapter. In the 24 years Smith since the land- mark decision, abortion has become one of the most debated topics in the country. It has led to many non-violent and violent protests - most recently the bombing of an Atlanta abortion clinic last week and an Oklahoma clin- ic on Sunday. "On one hand, we are commemorat- ing the decision," said Students for Choice President Stephanie Golden. "It is reaffirming that abortion is still legal." However, many people who original- ly supported the Supreme Court's rul- ing are changing their minds. Norma JOSH BIGGS/Daily Engineering senior Delano White gags himself in protest. Awards honor alternative works By Elizabeth Lucas Daily Staff Reporter Student protesters, car bombings and a chair wired with dynamite were only a few of the topics mentioned at yester- day's Hopwood Underclassmen Awards. These appeared in Elmore Leonard's novel "Freaky Deaky" and they - as well as Leonard - brought a very differ- ent atmosphere to the ceremony. "I don't think we've ever had a crime novelist before," said Hopwood Program associate Andrea Beauchamp. "(The Hopwood Committee) wanted to represent other kinds of writing, rather than poetry, criticism or straight fiction,' Beauchamp said. Beauchamp expected that Leonard would probably draw a larger crowd than usual to the award ceremony. "Pona1i k mw m wrk i expecant Herron, an RC junior. "I forgot Elmore Leonard was here, but it'll be interesting to hear something that could be good" As the ceremony began, English Prof. Charles Baxter gave out 10 Hopwood Awards and 15 awards in other contests. Baxter is also the acting director of the Hopwood . Program. j do The Hopwood Awards have been we y e in existence since 1931, and were crime no established befor e" through a bequest by playwright and -And University alum -ood 4 Avery Hopwood. Hopwood Pr T h e I nderlassmen Awards were estah- '1 r ond-year student Rachel Wertheimer. "He's so good at writing dialogue, and when you hear someone read it, it brings it out much more." Al Stuart, an Ann Arbor resident and former University registrar, also said he was a fan of Leonard's work. "I like the f think characters and the really, really or had a sparse prose. It goes fast,' Stuart said. "And the stories are always a ea Beauchamp surprise."- Whether he tram assoc iate was providing an example to aSnirina writers or simply offering I I