2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 11, 1995 NATION/WORLD Washington march gains support The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Tens or even hundreds of thousands of African American men will gather on the Mall Oct. 16 for what organizers envision as a solemn display of moral fortitude and political strength. They are calling it the Million Man March. Though numbers are impossible to predict, there already are abundant signs that the event has struck a chord in the black community. It is uniting a di- verse array of leaders under its banner and generating uncommon attention beyond the ranks of the politically active. Themarch is the brainchild ofNation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, whose stern calls for self-reliance and spiritual renewal resonate with many African Americans, but whose rhetoric, which has been widely criticized as anti- Semitic, repels many others. Some who in the past have kept Farrakhan at arm's length have made peace with him, at least for the moment, and are embracing the march. Others are putting aside deep disagreements to participate. As conceived by Farrakhan, the march will highlight aday on which black men will "straighten their backs" and pledge themselves to a restoration of values. He is asking black men across the country to stay off their jobs as part of an economic boycott. And he hopes that a mass of orderly, resolute African- American men in the nation's capital will stand in stark contrast to negative images that pervade popular culture. But some political leaders are seeking to make the event more than that. With economic upheaval and crime taking a heavy toll on African Americans, and with a Republican-controlled Congress pursuing an agenda that many regard as hostile to civil rights, organizers hope the march will ignite anew political urgency. Customarily cautious politicians such as Baltimore Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke and Philadelphia Mayor Edward G. Rendell, who is Jewish, have given their endorsement. Baptist preachers are organizing alongside Farrakhan's Muslim followers. Some well-known rap musicians, in- cluding Public Enemy and Brand Nubians, have signed on. Women, who have not been invited to march, but who are being asked for their support, are lining up to provide it. "I think there is an obvious groundswell of support for the march in the African American community," said Earl T. Shinhoster, interim execu- tive director of the NAACP, which has not taken a position on the march. "While the march has some controver- sial aspects, the overall notion that this will be a day of atonement during which African American men would chel- lenge themselves to do what's manly has an appeal." COALITION Continued fromn Page 1 of grass-roots, pro-family activists in America this year. At the conference, you could pick a presidential candidate or order a "Pre- cious Feet Baby," a life-sized doll of a 12-week-old fetus, four for $6.95 each or 100 for $4.50 each. Christian Coali- tion golf balls went fast at the bargain price of three for $9. "We the People" ties were $28, brought to you by a company called Ties that Bind, "It's not just a tie ... it's a ministry." The conference was staged, said del- egate Harold Hopkins, a Messianic Jew from Rochester, N.Y., for "getting the troops geared up, choosing the candi- dates and challenging our views." For Hopkins, who said he came to Christ 20 years ago through the minis- try of Pat Robertson's "700 Club," the conference exceeded his expectations, particularly on the final count. While the thousands of religious con- servatives drawn here for a weekend of political strategizing were largely white and well-coiffed, they were not all cut from a single piece of ideological cloth. There was Ann Reilly of Waltham, Mass., who turned to husband Alfred on her right to get an answer for the person on her left: "When they say we're right-wing radicals, what do we say, honey? Oh, yeah, we say: 'You're left-wing secular extremists from the culture of death."' And then there was Joseph Sharp, a semi-retired commercial artist from the greater Washington area, here "as an observer" with his pediatrician son, Stephen. "I sent (the coalition) a small donation a couple of times to see what they're up to. ... This is their ultimate goal: to control the government. They put forth good aims for doing this. But I believe that ultimately it will work against them and their principles." ' NATIONAL REPORT Gingch urges Powell not to run WASHINGTON- House SpeakerNewtGingrich urgedretiredGen. Colin Powell to give up any idea of an independent candidacy, saying yesterday that having a President outside the current party system is "a joke" that could lead to disaster. Gingrich, in an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," also revealed some details of the GOP plan to restore fiscal integrity to Medicare, including a proposal to apply means-testing to couples earning more than $125,000. Powell, in his new autobiography, says he is comfortable with neither party and the time may be ripe for the rise of a third party to represent the political center in America. He makes no commitment to lead such a party. Gingrich (R-Ga.) strongly urged him against that course. "I think it's frankly in the long run ajoke," he said. "This country is a party country.... There is no magic independence of people who are just able to stand up and magically produce a government." An independent presidency would be "a disaster for this country," he said. If Powell, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, ran as a Republican, he would immediately become the chief rival to GOP front-runner Sen. Bob Dole, Gingrich said. Gingrich, like Powell, says he will make no announcement of his own presiden- tial intentions until the end of the year. I L I Michigan Mondays! S. State 996-9191 Interested in making serious money marketing no annual fee for life credit cards: AT&T Universal MasterCard Discover Card Top Department Stores? For More Details Call 1-800-592-2121 ext. 313 Call Todayl ASK US HOW TO RECEIVE A FREE CD OF YOUR CHOICE! Judge imposes rare sanction on GM NEW YORK - A federal judge, ruling that General Motors Corp. has repeatedly disobeyed court orders in a major Oklahoma case set for today im- posed a rare and harsh sanction on the automaker that could severely hamper GM's defense. The ruling, which prohibits the automaker from introducing any ex- hibits at the upcoming trial, came in the latest court battle over GM's long- controversial design of its pickup trucks. The case has been marked by vast confidentiality orders and acri- monious discovery disputes that the judge said had become "vexing and inexcusable." U.S. District Court Judge Michael Burrage of Muskogee excoriated the automaker in an order Wednesday, rul- ing that GM had failed to adequately prepare its exhibits in the case, making it difficult for the plaintiff's lawyers to prepare forthe trial. The suit was brought by the family of 22-year-old Shawn D. Bishop, who was killed in a fiery 1993 crash of a GM pickup. The Bishop suit, like dozens of oth- ers against GM, alleged that GM's fuel tanks were vulnerable to deadly explo- sions in crashes because of a design defect. GM has consistently denied those allegations in court, and last year successfully blocked a government at- tempt to recall its pickup trucks. Prosecution readies its Simpson rebuttal LOS ANGELES-Lawyers on both sides of the O.J. Simpson case are ex- pected to come out swinging today in a new roundof legal wrangling that threat- ens to lengthen the trial and test the patience of the already restless jury. On Friday, a day after Judge Lance Ito told jurors the end was in sight, prosecutor Marcia Clark unveiled a list of 60 possible witnesses poised for a point-by-point rebuttal of the defense case. The primary goal will be to refo- cus the case against Simpson and away from former homicide detective Mark Fuhrman and the taped interviews that have monopolized the trial for more than two weeks and placed the state's case in jeopardy. University of Wisconsin-Platteville "If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost. That is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them." -Henry David Thoreaur 1 -C +-- Learn Your Way Around The World " Study abroad in Seville, Spain, or London, England, for a summer, for a semester or for a full academic year " Courses in liberal arts and international business * Fluency in a foreign language =QI required " Home-stays with meals " Field trips * Financial aid applies (except for summer session) Program Costs: " For tuition, room, board and field trips " In Seville, Spain $5,225 (fall or spring) for Wisconsin residents $5,475 (fall or spring) for non-residents " In London, England $4,395 (fall), $4,635 (spring) for Wisconsin residents $4,645 (fall), $4,885 (spring) for non-residents Application deadlines: " April 1 for summer session " April 30 for fall semester " October 15 (Seville), November 15 (London) for spring semester For a program description and an application, call toll free: 1-800-342-1725 Sept. 13, @ 7:30 Koessler Rm. 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FIND OUT ABOUT OPTIONS - GET OVERRIDE PERMISSION and NEEDED INFO 7:00 pm Monday Sept. 11 Michigan Union Anderson Rooms *Considering signing up for our service-learning course? *Want to know about options working with adult or juvenile corrections? in education settings? with the elderly? persons with mental illness or developmental disability? in hospital or community clinics? with teen moms or at Safe House? Office of Community Service Learning 2205- Michigan Union 763-3548 Hours 8-5 M-F " .. :::; '. i . * AROUND THE W St Maarten ofcials search for bodies in wake of hurricane PHILIPSBURG, St. Maarten - Firefighters and divers searched for bodies in the wreckage of shattered homes and sunken yachts yesterday as islanders gave thanks for the lives spared by Hurricane Luis. In full combat gear, Dutch marines shouldering FAL assault rifles con- trolled thousands of stranded tourists jamming the airport, and frightened away looters sifting through foot-high debris in a supermarket. Looters fled with everything from champagne to dishwashing liquid. The Red Cross confirmed two deaths in St. Maarten but expected the toll to rise. In Amsterdam, Dutch Interior Min- istry spokesman Ger Bodewitz said there were five dead. Other reports, which could not be independently con- firmed, said there were as many as 30 fatalities. One person was killed on the French side of the island, St. Martin, said Capt. Jean Bonnerie, a doctor with the French air force. "All the houses is mashed up, man, but 99.9 percent of the people survived," said Charles Peltier, who lives in St. Peter, one of the worst-hit neighbor- hoods of the capital Philipsburg. Five days after one of the century's ORLD most powerful hurricanes bore down on this Dutch-French Caribbean island, the sounds of pounding hammers and slash- ing machetes resounded through neigh- borhoods as people began to rebuild. Some Russian troopS leave Checbnya GROZNY, Russia- Long columns ofRussian troops rolled outofChechnya yesterday, the first since a July 30 ac- cord calling for a partial withdrawal. The Chechen rebels, meanwhile, agreed to a schedule for disarming their fighters, another key point in the mili- tary agreement, which has remained largely on paper amid mutual mistrust and accusations. Armed clashes have persisted in the southern republic. On Saturday, a Rus- sian tank commander was killed near Kurchaloi, about 12 miles east of the capital, Grozny, when rebels fired gre- nade launchers at his vehicle. The tank driver was missing and pre- sumably taken prisoner, Russian mili- tary officials said. Two other service- men were killed and three were wounded in rebel attacks Saturday and early yes- terday, they said. Russia's Independent Television showed long columns of armored ve- hicles and tanks, some flying Russian tricolor flags, rolling toward the Rus- sian border. -From Daily wire services The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95. year-long (September through April) is $160. Oncampus subscriptions for fail term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 7640558; Classified advertising 7640557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. 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