One hundred si years ofeditorialfreedom News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 7640)554 Thursday September 25, 199 ;. . . , .*v~ ' ' RS ' Er:, x. a :, ., .' : i 5 7 d.'- _. . , , , m , . 0 "There's a sense that what happens to one happens to all." - E. Royster Harper Dean of Students piag vigil planned for tonight By Peter RomerFriedman Daily Staff Reporter In the aftermath of the death of LSA Sior Tamara Williams, members of the University community are organiz- ing to pay tribute to her life. A vigil is planned for tonight at 8 p.m. on the Diag. "I think that the vigil is absolutely necessary to show ourselves and the world that the University of Michigan community stands against the incidents that have happened, and the unfortunate killing of our own because of domestic ,alence," said LSA junior David rline, one of the vigil's organizers and a member of Hillel's governing body. The vigil was originally planned in response to recent hate crimes in the community. "What we need to do is stand together in solidarity. We need to come together, not come apart." ~Dean of Students E. Royster Harper said she was proud of how the commu- nity pulled together after such an upset- incident. "Any time out of a tragedy, you look for ways to heal and be better" Harper said. "There's a sense that what happens to one happens to all. I think it will make a lot of people look at their own behav- ior. What's so powerful about silence is that you can hear your own voice." Williams' funeral will be held Saturday at the Eastlake Baptist Church, located at 12400 E. Jefferson ve. in Detroit. The church will open visitors at I1 a.m. and services will begin at noon. Leo Heatley, director of the [ See VIGIL, Page 5A Tuesday morning. Alarmed ca "I think he' Shes trying to Remembering Tamara Williams Vigil tonight, 8 p.m. on the Diag. To give money toward a fund for Williams' 2-year-old daughter, Kiera, call the Office of Student Affairs at 764-5132. Report details Williams murder By Stephanie Hepburn Daily Staff Reporter As Tamara Williams' boyfriend brutally stabbed her more than 10 times with a kitchen knife on Tuesday, at least 25 neighbors called 911 in a futile attempt to stop the murder. Williams, a 20-year-old LSA senior, died during surgery at University Hospitals at 3:24 a.m. from multiple stab wounds. She died from puncture wounds on her back, neck, chest and upper and lower back, Washtenaw County Medical Examiner Bader Cassin said in a preliminary autopsy report. "She's trying to get up, she can't," said the first man who got through to a 911 dispatcher. "I think he's killing her" said another caller. Leo Heatley, director of the Department of Public Safety, said that two or three of the deep stab wounds that Kevin Nelson, inflicted would have been enough to kill her. Heatley also said yesterday that a second bloody knife was found in Williams' apartment. According to the medical report, Williams had cuts on both of her hands and across her fingers, as well as scratches on the back of her left forearm. Such injuries seem to be indicative of efforts to defend herself, the autopsy report stated. The DPS officer who arrived on the scene saw Nelson standing over Williams and repeatedly stabbing her in the back. The officer then fired two fatal shots at the 26-year-old Ann Arbor resident, who died at 2:57 a.m. as a result of one of the gun- shot wounds. Both bullets entered the right side of his body, hitting his chest and abdomen. The DPS officer arrived on the scene at 12:20 a.m., three minutes after the first 911 call was placed. Ivan Mosely, an Ann Arbor resident and friend of Nelson's, spoke to Nelson just hours before the violent attack began. "He told me that he and Tamara were working it out and they were talking a lot more," Mosely said. "He was calm. Everything was cool. I have never seen him in a rage where he was capable of doing something like this." Two bloody knives were found on the crime scene, one in the basement and the other outside, where the attack ended. "The knife that Nelson used was a long-bladed kitchen knife," Heatley said. Heatley said there is still no theory about what exactly occurred in the apartment. "The argument may have started in the basement and moved upstairs to the kitchen area. There is a blood trail from the basement to the kitchen,' he said. The second knife adds another dimension to the murder, Heatley said: Perhaps Williams used the knife to defend herself. Friend ma know reason behind -attack By Jodi S. Cohen Daily Managing News Editor Tamika Pennamon wanted to hear her best friend's voice one last time. So she called the phone number she nor- mally dialed at least three times a day - and got the same answering machine message that she's heard dozens of times before. "I called her this morning out of daily rou- tine. I wanted to hear her voice," Pennamon said yesterday about Tamara Williams, who was brutally murdered Tuesday morning by her live-in boyfriend. "I left her a message..I told her she was in a better place." A college senior who lost her best friend, Pennamon has hardly been able to function in the past two days, vomiting when she pictures' the horrific murder scene. "She's my angel. I miss her so much that . have to stop thinking about her" Pennamon said. "The only thing I am thinking about is the time we had together - when I used to babysit for her or when we would go to the mall together." At Williams' funeral on Saturday, Pennamon will remove the "21" charm she wears around her neck and place it on her best friend. It will be her birthday present to Williams, who would have celebrated her 21st birthday on Monday. See FRIEND, Page 5A "It is within the realm of possibility that Williams used the knife in self defense," Heatley said. "We haven't established if it was self defense or if Nelson used it." Multiple horizontal "sharp cuts" were on the insides of both of Nelson's wrists, Cassin said. It is not yet known when the cuts were made or what the cuts could indicate about Nelson's mindset that day. Bruises and scrapes on the left side of Nelson's face may indicate that Williams was defending herself, Cassin said. Williams managed to get out of the house, go See WILLIAMS, Page 5A EMILY NATHAN/Daily Department of Public Safety, listens to tapes of $11 calls made early oilers alerted officials of the killing as it took place in Northwood housing. s killing her." -- --:-... -- --------.----- - - get up, she can't. -From two 911 calls placed early Tuesday morning Campaign for 'U' exceeds $1B fundraising goal Weekend celebration to honor donors, qinounce money totals By Janet Adamy Daily Staff Reporter Celebrations begin today to mark the end of the largest fundraising campaign ever by a public university. The Campaign for Michigan closes this weekend after exceeding its initial fundraising goal of $1 billion by an extra $300 million. "Virtually every major goal was hieved and we're very pleased with that,' said Roy Muir, associate vice president for development. Among the major donors who will be honored is University alumnus Preston Robert Tisch, co-chair of Loew's Corp. and co-owner of the New York Giants football team. In honor of his $7.5 million donation, there will be cemeronies today to dedi- Ste Tisch Hall at 12:30 p.m. and the Tsch Tennis Center at 2:30 p.m. The names of the more than 250,000 donors and the fundraising totals will be announced tomorrow during a mul- timedia presentation at the Power Center hosted by University alumnus Mike Wallace. Followina the announcement cele- the donors. Both events are closed to the public. Overall, the campaign raised $340' million in endowments, $150 million in bequest donations, $100 million in new facilities donations and $410 million in unrestricted support, which already has funded current academic programs and operations. The campaign began in 1989 under former University President James Duderstadt in an effort to maintain the strength of the University, Muir said. "The underlying basis for all of this was in order to maintain the academic position of the University of Michigan, it would depend on a growing bank of private support in addition to state sup- port," Muir said. Muir said the difference between this fundraising campaign and the University's previous fundraising efforts was the size of the goals and the comprehensiveness of the campaign. "We asked for larger gifts, but we tried to make the case for those gifts in terms of what impact those gifts would make on the University," Muir said, adding that the campaign targeted a broad base of University alums, friends and corporations through personal solicitation. Muir attributed the campaign's suc- ces to the Universitv's deans. School Yeltsin seeks- control of economy Los Angeles Times MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin moved to reclaim control over his country's economy yesterday when he put a small group of powerful bankers on notice that they will no longer decide frontier capitalism's rules of play. The president's announcement, in a speech to the upper house of the legis- lature, was the latest salvo in a war that has waged for months between Yeltsin's key architects of market reform and the "Big Seven" financiers who are thought to control as much as half of Russia's economy. Their funding helped the president get re-elected last year. The seven have enjoyed insider access to major privatization deals over much of the past two years but have lately bridled under government efforts to make the process more competitive. Yeltsin warned yesterday that future selloffs of state assets will be through competitive tenders and that "the state will not tolerate any attempts'to put pressure on it by the representatives of business and banks?' "The government is setting clear and equal rules of economic behavior," Yeltsin said. "We shall make everybody unconditionally abide by those rules- big business, medium business and small business, as well as the state EMILEY NATHAN/Daily Engineering senior Matther Wang, LSA senior Tricia Bagamasbad and ESA Junior Andrew Wong, United Asian Organization members, work together yesterday on office hour scheduling for the group. New A. agazine J..poli ranks 'U' 15th for Asian Americans By Nika Schulte For the Daily The Asian Pacific American student population on campus has risen more than 40 percent in the past seven years, reaching a total of about 3,600 students. More than 25 APA student groups organize these students to perform in cultural shows. do community service place for APA students, according to an "A. Magazine: Inside Asian America" survey. "It shows U of M has a lot to offer academically," said Marie Ting, pro- gram director for the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives. A. Magazine focused on factors such as the percentage of APA admin- istrators, the percentage of APA facul- participating universities' statistics. LSA sophomore Jane Kim has always been impressed with the University's opportunities for APA students but never fully appreciated them until this summer. Working as an intern in Washington D.C., Kim met students from schools including Yale University and University of Maryland. I I