One hundred ten years of edftil freedom NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 76440557 wwwmichigandallycom Monday October 16, 2000 s t ; '> a l i Q I 'U' student sister killed .. in car crash Shannon Mayes dies after oncoming vehicle runs red light, brother says By Caitlin Nish Daily Staff Reporter I I GROUND ZERO An early-morning collision in Saginaw Township yesterday killed a 20-year-old University student and her 14-year-old sister. Shannon Elizabeth Mayes, who transferred to the University from Delta Community College this semes- ter, and Heather Colleen Mayes of Saginaw, were pro- nounced dead at the scene of the 2:03 a.m. crash. The accident occurred when a 1992 Buick driven by a 20-year-old Saginaw man struck the 1994 Ford Aerostar van driven by Shannon Mayes. Both Mayes and her sis- ter were pronounced dead upon arrival at Covenant ooper Hospital. Another passenger in the van remained hospitalized at Covenant Cooper last night. The driver of the other car, Christopher Sandoval, was still in intensive care last night at St. Mary's Hos- pital in Saginaw. His passenger and a police officer who suffered smoke inhalation at the scene also were hospitalized. Mayes, a University junior, was home for the week- end to visit her family. "She came home Saturday to do our little sister Seather's hair and makeup for the Homecoming dance," said the girls' brother, Mike Mayes, an Albion College freshman. Mayes said Shannon was picking up Heather and her sister's friend after the dance when the accident occurred. The Saginaw Township Police Department was unable to confirm any specifics of the collision last night, but Mayes said police told his family the driver of the Buick had run a red light and struck the vehicle Shannon was driving. "The person who hit her, they don't know if he was drunk because they didn't take a blood alcohol test. He ran red light and was going 90 miles per hour," Mayes said. The accident remains under investigation. Shannon Mayes, who attended Saginaw Valley State University her freshman year before transferring to Delta Community College and then to the University to study pre-law, had recently been accepted into Phi Alpha Delta, the University of Michigan's business pre- law fraternity. See MAYES, Page 2A Bush, Gore visit state over weekend By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter DETROIT - As they head toward their final debate next Tuesday in St. Louis, Al Gore and George W. Bush made campaign stops in Southeast Michigan this weekend to woo middle-class vot- ers and assert the state's impor- tance in next month's election. A day after his Republican rival appealed to automotive industry workers at the C A M P A I General Motors plant in Pontiac, the vice presi- dent arrived-at the Detroit Public Library in time for a Saturday morning rally, despite being called back to the White House for an emergency meeting on events in the Middle East. In Detroit, Gore spoke in front of American flags lowered to half staff in honor of the 17 U.S. soldiers killed in Thursday's suspected terrorist attack on the USS Cole in Yemen. Gore, who had to cancel a meet- ing Friday evening with Arab-Amer- icans in Detroit, spoke only briefly about the recent escalation of vio- lence in Israel, expressing satisfac- tion that peace talks appear to be making some progress. State Democrats came out to rally for Gore, including U.S. Rep. Debbie Stabenow (D-Lans- ing), who is vying to unseat See CAMPAIGN, Page 2A NORMAd~N N/Daily Vice President Al Gore waves to the crowd at a rally Saturday in Detroit, a day after Texas Gov. George W. Bush's visit to a Pontiac General Motors plant. Li*ebermanrallies campaign donors By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter SOUTHFIELD - Rembrandt, Dali, Seurat: Not exactly the common political supporters who get their kicks from fundraising for a potential vice president. But the great artists were present nonetheless - at least in spirit -- for a fundraising event for Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman last night. "We are in one heck of a battle here in Michigan," Lieberman told a group of 250 con- tributors at the Park West, art gallery in Southfield. "I'm telling you, if we win it here, we're going to win it everywhere." Michigan has been deemed a battleground state in this year's presi- dential election. Both presidential candidates have visited the state sev- eral times in the past two weeks, including this weekend. Lieberman also was scheduled to speak to auto workers this morning in Ypsilanti. Lieberman was welcomed by prominent Democrats including U.S. Rep. Debbie Stabenow of Lansing, Sen. Carl Levin, Rep. Sander Levin of Sterling Heights, Attorney General Jennifer Granholm, Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer and former Michigan Gov. Jim Blanchard. Lieberman expressed his support for See LIEBERMAN, Page 2A, Lieberman Affirmative Action 102 events begin By Rachel Green Daily Staff Reporter DANNY MOLOSH1OK/Daily Members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Delta Sigma Phi fraternities clash Saturday in the 70th annual Mudbowl. *Mudbowl, pep rally ven Homecomig Dennis Kass, a graduate student instructor in the School of Education, said he encourages his students to get involved in this week's series of events dealing with Affirmative Action. "I am the GSI in a class titled 'Teaching in a Mul- ticultural Society,"' Kass said. "Within this class we have brought up and dis- cussed issues of affirmative action as it relates to race, gender and class within this sort of historical educational climate," Kass said. "The School of Education should be involved because it's a law suit about education." Kass was one of the nearly 30 students in atten- dance at last night's kick off of Affirmative Action 102, 10 days of events at the University aimed to educate students about affirmative action. Rackham student Jessica Curtin, a member of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary and a Michigan Student Assembly representative, is a coordinator of this week's events. She spoke last night at an informal meeting held in MSA chambers designed to introduce some of the key speakers scheduled to address affirmative action during the next week. Curtin said this week's events will focus on the two lawsuits filed in 1997 against the University by the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Individual Rights challenging its use of race as a factor in admissions at the Law School and College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts. The lawsuit against the law school is set to go to trial in January. "MSA has stood for the defense of affirmative action from the start," Curtin said. "This week we'll set the tone for the upcoming trials." Last night's speakers included interim Vice Presi- dent for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper, who expressed the University's support of affirmative See 102, Page 7A Affirmative Action 102 Some of this week's events include: * Today Panel: Standardized Tests School of Education, Schorling Auditorium, 3 - 5 p.m. M Tuesday Panel: Educational Benefits of Diversity Business School, Room D1270, 2 p.m. Wednesday Panel: The Myth of Meritocracy and the Necessity of Affirmative Action Angell Hall Auditorium B, 8 p.m. Thursday Rally and March Noon on the Diag Stay up late1 Volunteers re-enact Peace Corps proposal By Whitney Elliott Daily Staff Reporter In addition to a 58-0 drubbing of diana on Saturday, University stu- dents and alumni watched mud fly as Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity sponsored the 70th annual Mud- bowl. Before the foot- "All four ball game Satur- day, University brothers alum Terry Roach and several of his come bac #iends watched students slip and every yes slide in the mud- pit outside of the SAE house on the corner of Washte- naw and South University avenues. Remembering his days at SAE, dents and alumni. During halftime, sisters from Sigma Kappa and Kappa Alpha Theta engaged in a mud war of their own. In a last-minute decision Saturday morning, Kappa Alpha Theta agreed By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter of my and ck here ir." - Ann Bonevick University alum freshman. to play in the game after Kappa Kappa Gamma backed out. "I loved it - it was Sigma Kappa pride. It was some- thing we all loved to do," said Sigma Kappa pledge Lorelee Bankert, an Art and Design * University alum Lee Jackson remembers the night 40 years ago when the administration extended cur- few for her and her female classmates and John F. Kennedy's convertible rolled into town. She handed out Kennedy buttons, pushing her way to the front of the crowd to listen as Kennedy expressed the need for young people to contribute and take action. Returning Peace Corps volunteers and friends joined together Friday to commemorate Kennedy's Oct. 14, 1960, stop on the steps of the Michi- gan Union, where he proposed an idea that ultimately became the Peace "If (Kennedy) was standing here now, he would be so proud to feel that the dream he articulated on these steps has been realized," Peace Corps National Press Director Eileen Cassidy said. Friday's event kicked off a yearlong celebration of the Peace Corps' 40th anniversary. "It's honoring the legacy of the Peace Corps and recreating a direction for the future," Schneider said, "and tonight we're here to recognize what began here and to see what's been accomplished by the 161,000 volun- teers since." Kennedy signed the executive order creating the Peace Corps March 11, 1961, and the program's three goals Earlier in the weekend. watermel- II