T It irni ti News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 7640554 Classified Ads: 76440557 One hundred eight yearofedai freedom Tuesday January 19, 1999 p.y s .utfM , 7" N . students die im car gccident By Michaelaes, Yaei Kohen and Kelly O'Connor Daily Staff Reporters Two University students died and two others were injured in a car accident on the Old Mission Peninsula, one mile north of Traverse City yesterday at 9:33 a.m. LSA first-year student Kelson Smith driving a four-door Jeep when he lost control of the vehicle and it crossed the center line and sideswiped the dri- ver's side door of a Chevrolet pickup truck, Sgt. David Meachum of the Grand Traverse County Sheriff's Department said. A third vehicle then struck the pas- senger side of the Jeep, which contained three other University students. LSA first-year student Celia Zwerdling, seated in the passenger seat, .s killed, along with LSA first-year dent Sarah Metzger, who was sitting in the passenger side of the back seat, Meachum said. Late last night, Smith's condition was listed as fair and the Jeep's fourth pas- senger, LSA first-year student Alyssa Rosen, was listed in serious condition. Both were taken to Munson Medical Center in Traverse City after the acci- dent. County sheriff and hospital officials ad not confirm whether Zwerdling and Metzger died at the scene of the accident or sometime after. The accident victims were part of a group of 1I students returning from a weekend ski trip in three separate cars, which left a friend's cabin near Traverse City at different times yesterday morn- ing. The two other cars were not involved C the accident, said LSA first-year stu- nt Tim Mooney, Smith's roommate who was part of the trip.. Mooney said he left the cabin an hour after Smith and approached the accident scene, blocked off by rescue officials. Meachum said no alcohol was involved in the accident and every pas- senger in all three vehicles was wearing- a seat belt. Although the prosecutor's office will termine what or who was at fault and at action will be taken, Meachum speculated that icy road conditions, which also caused the cancellation of See CRASH, Page 3A Fail ils Iems St. student By Sarah Lewis Iaily Staff Reporter The list of Michigan students who died tragically after drinking rose Friday when a 20-year-old Ferris State &'iversity student died after falling from r third-floor apartment window. Allen was drinking in her off-campus apartment with friends on Thursday night, said Kevin Courtney, director of public safety for Big Rapids. After Allen went to bed and everyone except Allen's roommate left the apart- ment, Courtney said, Allen's roommate heard a crash that sounded like glass breaking around midnight Friday. She then went to Allen's bedroom, g ked out the broken window and saw lien lying on the ground below. "Witnesses outside saw her fall out the window," Courtney said. "She was alive after she landed"' Allen was initially taken to Mecosta County General Hospital, where her blood alcohol level was found to be 0.22, twice the legal level of intoxication in the state of Michigan. Later, a helicopter flew Allen to hetrum Health-Downtown in Grand Rapids, where she died at approximate- ly 3 p.m. Friday afternoon, Courtney said. The autopsy determined the cause of death to be massive head injury and body trauma resulting from the fall. -,,-*4- Sending out a call for action 10Vanni packsHill p csfor lecture By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter People of all backgrounds sat together in a packed Hill Auditorium yesterday to hear renowned American poet Nikki Giovanni deliver a light and witty keynote speech with a powerful message. Giovanni honored Martin Luther King, Jr. by giving the University symposium's memorial lecture. She emphasized the importance of a having a younger generation of Americans committed to furthering equality. "You must go on," Giovanni said, adding that while she is encouraged by progressive reforms throughout history, the struggle is far from over. Through her poetry and prose, Giovanni has been a strong voice for equality for more than 25 years. Her talent for sto- rytelling rang through in yesterday's speech as she supported her points with detailed stories, personal anecdotes and cur- rent events. "It's really a sad day to watch this spectacle going on in Washington," she said referring to the impeachment trial of President Clinton. Giovanni was unreserved in her comments, saying she too would lie if she slept with Monica Lewinsky and calling for- mer FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover a "son of a bitch." Some audience members raised eyebrows at her claim that rapper Tupac Shakur was assassinated because of his power. Others said they were drawn in by Giovanni's presence and the conversational way she engaged her audience. "It's refreshing that somebody can say what they want to say ... not caring what other people think," Nursing first-year student Tanina Media said. University alumnus Julie Lubeck was not as refreshed by Giovanni's frankness. "I think she gave a controversial mes- sage," Lubeck said. Giovanni spoke of various racial and sexual injustices that she said exist in the U.S. She recounted a story about a black boy whose mother wanted to get him off the streets of Chicago. The mother sent her son to Mississippi where she thought he would be safer, but he was later murdered there. Giovanni decried the use of violence against homosexuals, citing the beating of Matthew Shepard, a gay University of Wyoming student. "We refuse to believe that America is morally bankrupt," she stated. Giovanni concluded with a call for people on campus and across the country to fight for equality. "All of you have the possibility to do something great and something different,' she said. Audience members met Giovanni's closing words with a standing ovation and some joined in the MLK Day march that followed. The University has a tradition of naming lounges through- out the campus after prominent minority leaders. There is a Nikki Giovanni lounge in the Mosher-Jordan Residence Hall, where a reception was held for her Sunday night. Despite the cold weather and slush, more than 100 MLK Day programs mobilz students By Kelly O'Connor Daily Staff Reporter In the last few moments before Honorable Constance Baker Motley took the podium, organizers scurried to find enough chairs for the audi- ence members crdwding the doorway of a Hutchins Hall classroom. But the lack of space didn't scare away listeners. People stood in back, sat on the floor and lined the walls of the room as a University professor introduced Motley to the crowd. Motley, the first black woman appointed to the federal bench, spoke of her experiences as a clerk for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund under Thurgood Marshall. Law second-year student Brian Stolzenbach said Motley's active role in the Civil Rights Movement peaked his interest. "I thought it would be interesting to hear someone who has been involved in things rather than just thought about things:' Stolzenbach said. Motley's speech is one of more than 80 events being held in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. this month. The 1999 symposium, titled "On the Verge of a New Millennium ... STAND!,' consists of workshops, speeches and marches that make up one of the country's largest MLK Day celebrations. Other schools also planned many events in observance of the holiday. Michigan State University hosted a speech by King's son, Martin Luther King III. His speech centered around his father's ideas and his concern for the nation's poor. After the speech, King See MLK, Page 8A Above: Poet Nikki Giovanni shows off her tattoo reading "Thug Life" in honor of Tupac Shakur yesterday. Giovanni was the keynote speaker for the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Lecture at Hill Auditorium. JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Left: Engineering first. year student Cornell Schultz, MSA student representative for the College of Engineering on the Defend Affirmative Action Party ticket, holds a sign at an MLK Day rally on the Dlag yesterday. Schultz was one of several students addressing a crowd of about 200 people. DANIEL O'DONNELL/Daily Duderstadt speaks on mandate By Michael Grass Daily Staff Reporter Although James Duderstadt has been out of office for near- ly three years, he still is part of diversity issues on campus - more than just being named as a defendant in the two lawsuits aiming to abolish the use of race in University admissions. The former University president spoke last night at Bursley Residence Hall on student activism and its relation to the Michigan Mandate - a set of policies enacted during his administration that brought more minority students and fac- ulty to campus. "I wanted to bring people from the upper administration closer to the students and what better way is there than to have (Duderstadt) speak. He put forth a policy that changed the face of the University" said Bursley minority peer advi- sor assistant William Johnson, an Engineering senior and an organizer of the event. The Michigan Mandate, first enacted in 1989, marked the culmination of a period of intense social activism on campus. "In order to awaken the University, it took the action of stu- dents," Duderstadt said. In the 1960s and 1970s, the University began to make changes in reaction to the student-driven Black Action Movement. Duderstadt said BAM activism brought more black faculty and staff to the University. "Social obligations were realized," Duderstadt said. After a period of stagnant student activism in the 1970s, the administration "went to sleep" in the 1980s, Duderstadt said. In reaction to this, a new movement, BAM II, brought about even more changes. Many students demanded that University investments in South Africa be divested because of the government's apartheid policies. Along with the United Coalition against Racism, BAM II "pushed really hard against the University," Duderstadt said. Starting in 1986, a strategic plan for the Michigan See DUDERSTADT, Page 7A See GIOVANNI, Page 8A Inside ML.K coverage: Some University students use their day off for community service. Page 3A. Encompass, a pan-ethnic show, draws 1,500 to the Michigan Theater. Page 7A. Native American activist lectures on the cultural insensitivity in sports mascots. Page 7A. Students pay tribute to King through music performances Page 8A. Dems: Witnesses may be inevitable At the Capitol Look for in- depth coverage of the Michigan delegation at the Senate trial later this week as The Michigan Daily heads to Washington. Jackson, Brooks may be off team for next season Impeaching he President, WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate's Democratic leader conceded yesterday that witnesses "may be inevitable" in President Clinton's impeachment trial but said that once live testimony starts the Senate could lose much of its control over the proceedings. A Republican victory on calling Monica Lewinsky and others could extend the trial indefinitely, said Sen. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.). And he speculated that it also i-mild A 1a...o n . ,, eQ*.r cn ctne r I 00 senators A s D aschle commented, White House By Rick Freeman and Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporters The indefinite athletic suspensions of Michigan football players Jason Brooks and Ray Jackson, who were allegedly involved in a Jan. 8 scuffle outside the Sigma Chi fraternity house, could last throughout next season, Michigan Athletic Director Tom Goss said yesterday. "I doubt whether they will be on the team Associate Athletic Director for Media Relations Bruce Madej confirmed last night. Peterson declined comment on the matter yesterday. "We will allow him to complete this semes- ter" on his athletic scholarship, Goss said. "He is a student here ' Athletic Department officials did not specify why Peterson was removed from the team, but said reasons behind the three sus- pensions varied. Peterson was suspended from the team for his involvement in a mis- lawyers honed the defense presentation they will begin today. It will focus on conflicts in testimony, a strategy that would be aimed at undercutting House charges of perjury and obstruction of justice but that also could onen the wav tn Renhlican demands for witnesses to