NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 7, 2005 - 3 . ON CAMPUS School of Music faculty to play Mozart, others . Professors from the School of Music will perform tonight at the Britton Recital Hall in the School of Music at 8 p.m. They will play Mozart, Brahms, Berio, Horvit and Glinka. Performing will be Fred Ormand on the clarinet, Christopher Hading on the piano, Katherine Votapek on the viola, Julia Broxholm as a soprano and Rich- ard Beene on the bassoon. For more information, contact Rachel Francisco at 764-0594 or e-mail her at rachaf@umich.edu. Organ recital slated for tonight Ben LaPrarie will play the organ tonight at 8 p.m. at Hill Audito- rium. For more information, contact the School of Music through Rachel Francisco at 764-0594. Warren Robbins Gallery to host performance Artists Christa Donner, Robert Goodman, Andrea Landau, Jason Yah and Chris Landau explore the "delinquint systems of the domestic, the body, the senses, landscape and technology." The performance will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. tonight in the Warren Robbins Gallery at the Art a and Architecture. For more informa- tion, contact Kate West at 763-1265. CRIME NOTES Vehicle damaged, police deem incident malicious A vehicle was damaged Tuesday in a parking lot at 1170 West Medical Center, according to Department of Public Safety reports. DPS called the incident "malicious destruction." The investigation is continuing. Basketball player injured at CCRB A person playing basketball was injured at the Central Campus Rec- reation Building Wednesday night at about 7 p.m, according to DPS reports. Personal item swiped from Mott A personal item was stolen from C.S. Mott Children's Hospital Wednesday afternoon, according to DPS reports. The alleged crime occured at about 1 p.m. Theft occurs at residence hall A caller told DPS that his property had been stolen from South Quad Res- idence Hall. The incident was reported Wednesday at 4:16 p.m. THIS DAY Students take reins of King symposium Colleges see larger payoffs on investments this year By Christina Hildreth Daily Staff Reporter This year's annual Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium will, for the first time, be completely on the shoulders of students The symposium, which opens on Monday, has been taking place at the University since 1987. Previously, it had been largely organized and run by University staff. Past years' celebrations have been undercut by student indifference toward Martin Luther King Day, organizers say. As the holiday forms a three-day weekend, many students use that opportunity to go home, or simply take the day off school. "Unfortunately, to a lot of people that is just what it is (a day students get to go home). As much as we can do to educate people about what's going to be out there, to some it's still just a day off," said LSA freshman Jasmine Floyd. Silvia Carranza from the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives said this year's greater student par- ticipation aims to correct that, get- ting students involved right from the planning stages. "The reality of MLK day is that it's a day off for students. But the reason it's a day off is so that people can attend (the events)," Carranza said. "There are 22 events taking place on MLK day alone. It's not just for the benefit of staff - we want to make it more enticing for students to be able to take part in it." Over the past three years, students have taken increasingly involved roles in planning the theme and events to celebrate King's life and philosophy. This year is "for students, by stu- dents," Carranza said. The symposium's opening event, "A Tribute to a King," is a free show- case performance at the Mendels- sohn Theatre planned by students. The show will feature various student groups commemorating King through spoken word, dance and drama. "We put the show together, we con- tact different groups and we adver- tise for it," Alicia Benavides, an LSA sophomore and student staff member for the symposium said. She is one of five students in charge of planning the month-long celebration Each year the planners of the sym- posium address a different angle of King's life and work. This year the planning committee settled on the theme "The Simple Art of Living Together," inspired by a quote taken from one of King's sermons. "We have learned to fly the air like birds and swim the sea like fish, but we have not learned the simple art of living together like brothers," King said in the 1961 sermon. (AP) The investment portfolios of colleges, universities and other educational institutions enjoyed their best year since the stock mar- ket downturn began, according to a new survey that shows educational nonprofits recovering in fiscal 2004 after several years of losses or mea- ger gains. The 707 endowments surveyed by the research arm of Common- fund, which helps manage money for 1,600 nonprofit institutions and foundations, earned an average of 14.7 percent in the 12 months ending June 30. That compared to investment gains of 3..1 percent in 2003, and losses in the two years prior to that. Since most educational nonprofits use about 5 percent of their assets per year to support operations, many institutions had spent several years treading water at best. "It certainly is a helpful rebound. It doesn't put nonprofits out of the woods yet because their budgets were severely tested and squeezed during the bear market," said John Griswold, executive director of the MLK Commonfund Institute. Respondents to the survey includ- ed colleges and universities as well as independent secondary schools and private education foundations. The survey, released yesterday, also found that the best-performing endowments have generally been shifting money away from hedge funds, suggesting the "smart money" that led the charge into these invest- ments several years ago may be looking elsewhere now that they have become trendy. Overall, however, the survey revealed few dramatic changes in how nonprofits are investing their money. _Average allocations to domestic stocks (31 percent), fixed income (15 percent), internation- al stocks (16 percent) and cash (4 percent) were all within a few per- centage points of the figures in last year's survey. The best-performing endowments were more heavily concentrated in investments such as real estate and energy, the survey found. Some of the wealthiest educa- tional endowments have already reported their results for last year. Harvard University, the world's rich- est, earned a 21.1 percent return on its investments to bring its endow- ment's total value to $22.6 billion in the year ending June 30. Yale, the No. 2 private university endowment, earned 19.4 percent and stands at $12.7 billion. For universities and colleges, much of the money is set aside and can only be used for specific pur- poses - scholarships, for instance, or endowed professorships. The surveyed institutions con- tinued to spend about the same percentage of their endowment on operating costs -- 4.8 percent last year, compared to 4.9 percent in fis- cal 2003 and 5.1 percent in fiscal 2002. Some public schools dipped more aggressively into their savings to help weather state budget cuts. The institutions surveyed said they don't expect to do as well in fiscal 2005, predicting investment gains of 7.9 percent. Forty-two percent of responding institutions reported an increase in gifts received during the year, 2005 This year's symposium will high- light some of King's ideas that often take a backseat to his groundbreak- ing work with civil rights. "People are definitely used to hearing about his ideas on civil rights issues," Carranza said. The plan- ning committee wanted to choose a theme that would explore "sides of Dr. Martin Luther King that people weren't so used to hearing about," she said. Such ideas include King's Poor People's Campaign, which was to be the beginning of King's crusade on class issues. The campaign, which King planned shortly before his death in 1968, was launched by his follow- ers after his assassination but failed to gain momentum in the absence of his leadership. The symposium will also explore King's Christian theologies, his work to open dialogue about social issues and his ideas on peaceful protest. "Everything King did was rooted in the Christian philosophy that he held so dear to his heart," Carranza said, adding that King's ability to ini- tiate a national conversation on civil rights can serve as a model to rectify the current polarization in American public opinion. The symposium consists of over 90 events addressing these topics, rang- ing from one-hour lectures to week- long exhibits The three main events sponsored by the symposium's planning com- mittee are the opening performance on Monday, a memorial lecture given by former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Henry Cisneros and a closing lecture given by black activist and author Walter Mosley. Other events include lectures, photography exhibits, interactive museums and musical dramatic per- formances. In Daily History 'U' faces fine for radioactive spill in Med Sci 1 Building Jan. 7, 1993 - University officials met with lawyers to decide whether or not to pay a fine for a radioactive chemical spill. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Com- mission had given the University until Jan. 13 to pay or contest the $3,750 penalty. The NRC proposed the fine after investigating an incident in which a graduate student accidentally spilled a chemical in early September 1993. The small amount of radioactive phospho- rus was not detected until three days after the student researcher spilled it OIP Summer Study Abroad Fair Thursday,January 13,2005 3 to 5 p.m. Pendleton Room, Michigan Union 2004 Study Abroad Photo Contest Grand Prize Winner Moll;**Zipkin I