2A -The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, January 16, 2001 NATION/WORLD Biographer disputes memory of King DYSON Continued from Page 1A American mind as the "I Have a Dream" man, delivering his famous speech to a sea of listeners in front of the Washington Monument. Today the real King "is all but obscured," Dyson said. The legacy most Americans cele- brate is an incomplete one. Dyson said King recognized that "while race is important, class is important as well." "We're still seeing 'Dick and Jane' run in second-hand schoolbooks" Dyson said King would be amazed if he saw society today, but he would also be disappointed. "Black faces in high places" do not necessarily mean that the majority of blacks' interests are represented, Dyson said. Black conservatives passively live with the inequalities King fought to eliminate, Dyson said. He continued on to declare that to be part of the struggle, people need to be educated. Major barriers must be toppled for education to be accomplished, and the barriers relate more to economic inequalities King noticed than the racial inequalities he is revered for, fighting, Dyson said. MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Michael Eric Dyson, author of several books, lectured on the "true" Martin Luther King Jr. in Rackham Auditorium yesterday afternoon. while speed every the suburbs are enjoying high- Internet access and computers in classroom, Dyson said. SERVICE Continued from Page1IA Aronson, Rajan and Boyd were part of about 200 students who par- ticipated in "Acting on the Dream." Participants divided between 22 volunteer sites located from Ann Arbor to Detroit, and activities ranged from sorting food for the homeless to playing Bingo with the elderly. Those who tore the house down volunteered with Motor City Blight Busters. Project SERVE began the MLK Day of Service six years ago after hearing a speech from Coretta Scott King. "She told us that if you want to honor Dr. King, you need to be out doing service," Project SERVE director Anita Bohn said. "We call this program 'Acting on the Dream' because it fits with the work that Dr. King wanted us to do." Bohn opened the day of service by encouraging participants to not only work on King's dream, but also their own dreams. "The whole idea behind one day service projects is to spark the interest in community service," said LSA senior Shelly Hundiwal, one of the project coordinators. "This gets the ball rolling because they get to meet people and have fun and do community service," she added. "This has definitely inspired me to do more service like this," said LSA senior Pradeep Naga. Other students had prior experience with community service before partic- ipating in "Acting on a Dream." "My sorority always does communi- ty service like this," said LSA junior Natalie Stegall. "It's so rewarding see- ing everyone work together." OLMOS Continued from Page IA look like he came from the Mediterranean," leaving Monts to portray Jesus. Jesus' Caucasian depiction is one instance of a prevalent problem in today's society, the tendency to overlook minori- ties' contributions to society. Minority children grow up without knowing that their ancestors played vital roles in American development, Olmos said. After an informal poll revealed about 100 doctors, hundreds more college graduates and even more stu- dents were in attendance, Olmos challenged the crowd to name one Asian-American who could be considered an American hero. Less than a dozen hands went up. 'You need courage in this country to answer that ques- tion'" Olmos said. It isn't that minorities have played an insignificant role in American history; it's that their accomplishments are not recognized. Olmos said this is one reason why it is important that Martin Luther King, Jr. is recognized as a national hero - King gave minorities the right to publicly denounce these misconceptions. ECSTASY Continued from Page IA cern to a "honeymoon period" for the drug, a time when people don't realize the long-term consequences, which include neurological disor- ders, respiratory failure, anxiety and liver damage. Johnston compared this to the use of cocaine in the late '70s and early '80s, when users did not realize the serious side effects of the drug until later in the decade. Some students exercise foresight when thinking about drug use. "Students ultimately need to make their own decisions, but they have to look at the future," Engi- neering student Chris Vermillion said. "People need to ask them- selves, 'Will I regret the decisions I made,' before taking the drug." Hundreds march on MLK Day RALLY Continued from Page A on the steps of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. BAMN member Ebonie Byndon said although BAMN has encountered problems with BSU members in the past, BSU members have never before charged into a BAMN event. BSU members said they feel BAMN is an outside force which does not truly reflect the concerns of the minority students of the University. Monique Luse, an LSA sophomore on the.BSU executive board, said BSU respects that BAMN fights for affirma- tive action, but they don't agree with their tactics. "The organization is not run by University students. BSU, on the other hand, is led by the students. BAMN does not have that same ele- ment," Luse said. Throughout the rally, sparks began to fly between BAMN and BSU members in the crowd. "We would work hand in hand with this organiza- tion, but they won't let us," said BSU historian D'Yal Mcallister. Donna Stern, a paralegal for BAMN, said the BSU and BAMN have different ideas about the type of action to take for progress in the area of affirmative action. "They don't want mass militant action. It takes people getting on the streets to win. (BSU is) against mass action which is how civil rights was won in the first place," Stern said. Following the rally a small scuffle broke out between BAMN member and LSA sophomore Agnes Aleobua and Mcallister. Members of their respective organizations quickly broke it up. BAMN chose MLK Day to demand equality and integration in education on the streets. "Affirmative action is our right," marchers chanted. The rally also occurred one day before the Uni- versity goes to trial to defend its Law School admissions policy. One student protested what the activists rallied for. LSA freshman Adam Dancy held up a sign which read "King would hate affirmative action." "MLK dreamed of a world where children would be judged on the content of their character, not their race," Dancy said. "King would not like this." He had earlier held up another sign which read "affirmative action is racist" that had been torn apart by marchers. Dancy and his signs were met with a barrage of snowballs and as the crowd neared the Diag, one marcher mum- bled, "you're lucky it's just snowballs." The march and rally in memorium of King were sponsored by Defend Affirmative Action by Any Means Necessary, Members of the Social Welfare Action Alliance, Minority Affairs Commission and Native Amer- ican Student Association, as well as students from Mackenzie Hiah School Clinton dreams of 'One America' WASHINGTON - President Clinton, who came of age during the height of the nation's civil rights struggles in the 1960s, marked Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday underscoring his own dream that racial and ethnic divides in America will someday disappear. "Part of Martin Luther King's dream was that somehow we would learn to 'work together, pray together, struggle together, go to jail together, stand up fo freedom together;" Clinton said, quoting the civil rights leader who was assassi nated in 1968. "If I could leave America with one wish as I depart office, it would be that we become more the 'One America' that we know we ought to be." Clinton marked the King holiday with a speech to about 900 people at the University of the District of Columbia. President-elect Bush spoke at a Houston elementary school where he promised blacks that he would "listen not only to the successful, but also to the suffering." Clinton likened efforts to unite the nation's diverse citizens to life itself. "It's a journey, not a destination, and the main thing will always be whether we're still taking the trip," he said. Clinton also referred to a message he sent to Congress over the weekend tha calls for improving the criminal justice system, restoring voting rights for peoplW who complete their prison sentences and better educating American Indians. Ashcroft condemns Senate Judiciary Committee begin- ning today, also faces questions about use of racial profiling other hot-button issues, including: Judicial selections for the Supreme WASHINGTON - With 10 of Court and other federal court seats; President-elect Bush's 16 Cabinet his unyielding anti-abortion stance; nominees facing senators this week, and his opposition to confirming a Attorney General-designate John black Missouri judge, Ronnie White Ashcroft spoke out yesterday against to the federal bench. the practice of racial profiling by police on the eve of his confirmation M otorola to shut hearing that is expected to focus Illinois plant sharply on his civil rights record. down Ip "I certainly would like to find a way CHICAGO - Hoping to boost to be absent that kind of practice," sagging profits, wireless giant Ashcroft said. "It's wrong, inappropri- Motorola Inc. said yesterday that it ate. It shouldn't be done." He said will close its only U.S. cellphone Bush "is sensitive to this problem." factory and lay off about 2,500 Ashcroft and Gale Norton, as Inte- plant employees. rior secretary, are meeting opposition The jobs being cut in Harvard not seen since the 1991 Clarence Ill., represent nearly 2 percent of Thomas hearings during the adminis- Motorola's work force of 130,000. tration of Bush's father. About 2,500 employees will Ashcroft, mostly silent while liberal remain at the factory 60 miles groups have assailed his record, con- northwest of Chicago, working on fronted one controversial issue - research, marketing and customer racial profiling - in a conversation service. with Bush officials in the presence of Cell-phone production will end by reporters. June 30. The Harvard plant was Ashcroft, who appears before the Motorola's costliest. AROUND TH E ORLD L Palestinians propose group of settlers went on a rampage in a nearby Palestinian village. Settlers concessions to Israel burned a greenhouse, smashed car win- dows and shot toward homes. JERUSALEM - The Palestinian In the West Bank village of Kfar Authority offered amnesty to suspect- Salem, a Palestinian man was shoS ed collaborators with Israel yesterday, dead in a clash with Israeli troops. Ear- saying it wanted to cut off the flow of lier in the day, shots were fired from information that has enabled Israel to Kfar Salem at an Israeli convoy, injur- track down and assassinate a number ing a-motorist. of Palestinian gunmen and militia leaders. El Salvado begins Despite this shadowy war fought bySa ad"e n the two sides, peace talks were to post-quake recovery resume today, after a day's break called by Israel over the killing of a SANTA TECLA, El Salvador -5 Jewish settler by Palestinians near his Relief efforts in the aftermath of greenhouse in the Gaza Strip. Nego- Saturday's devastating earthquake tiators held a preparatory meeting late entered a new phase yesterday, shift- last night. ing from the chaos of hundreds of In response to the slaying, Israeli hopeful friends and neighbors dig- troops reimposed a tight blockade on ging for survivors to a grim, deliber- the Gaza Strip, closing the Palestini- ate effort to find and bury as many ans' international airport and border of the victims as possible. crossings. Troops blocked major roads, Police set the official death toll at cutting the strip into three parts. 594, with perhaps as many as 1,000 After 30-year-old Roni Tsalah's missing and presumed dead. body was found Monday in an orange grove near the Kfar Yam settlement, a - Conpiledfron Daily wire reports NOJlwill1i IJIi The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is puolished Monday through Friday during the fall and winter termsby students at the University of Michigan. 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