- 1 S3* Ferocious failure January The new comedy‘Tierce Creatures” has the same “ cast andjokes that made “A Fish Called Wanda” Mw* 0> UP a classic, but it doesn’t measure up. PAGE 12 Mostly sunny, high 18. Cloudy tonight, low 12. JR VOL. 96 " COVERING THE UNIVERSITY LINCOLN SINCE 1901 NO. 88 Jay Calderon/DN REV. JOHN CARTER speaks to about 40 members of the Lincoln community Monday night at St. John’s Baptist Church, 701N. 24th St. The recent ritual burning of a cress by members of Sigma Chi fraternity hassparked racial tension in Lincoln. ~ " p Clergy, leaders call ritual racist By Erin Gibson Senior Reporter The University of Nebraska-Lin coln has failed to correct morally un acceptable, racist behavior in dealing with a UNL fraternity, Lincoln com munity leaders said Monday. About 40 Lincoln clergymen, citi zens and students gathered at the St. John’s Baptist Church, 701N. 24th St., to demand the university correct rac ism at UNL. Rev. Jessie Myles of Mt. Hermon Baptist Church said the university has been unacceptably passive when deal ing with matters of racial tension. “We will committee this to death. We will research this to death,” Myles said. “It’s time for something to hap pen. Myles joined others at St. John’s church who said a weekend incident involving Sigma Chi fraternity is evi dence racism is prevalent in Lincoln. Lancaster County Sheriff’s depu ties reported that fraternity members were found last Thursday night con ducting a ritual that involved Confed erate uniforms, sabers, rifles and the burning of a 6-foot-tall cross. No arrests were made regarding the ritual. The university released a statement that said Sigma Chi did not violate university policy and would not face university sanctions. But Rev. John Carter of St. John’s church said the university must take a strong stand against such racism as expressed by Sigma Chi. “If you can’t say that it’s wrong, then you’re condoning the conduct,” Carter said. “It is wrong,” he said. “That’s the bottom line. It is wrong.” Myles spoke forcefully of Sigma Chi’s justification of the ritual. Frater nity spokesmen have said the ritual is an important re-enactment of fraternity history. Myles said the event had clearly racist undertones. “There just comes a point where you get tired of this crap,” Myles said. Please see FORUM on 6 UNL won’t penalize Sigma Chi for ritual By Esin Gibson Senior Reporter An apologetic Sigma Chi fraternity will not face university sanctions for a weekend ritual that included burning a cross, a university spokesperson an nounced Monday. Linda Schwartzkopf, acting direc tor of Cheek Affairs at UNL, said the fraternity did not violate the Univer sity Student Code of Conduct during the pre-initiation ritual. Sigma Chi members’ actions were protected by the First Amendment guaranteeing freedom of speech, she said, but the university will use the incident to raise cultural awareness and the fact that while nofteg^^°mtent may have; been present, use of Con federate memorabilia and a burning cross in close proximity will almost certainly be misinterpreted as having racist connotations,” she said in a state ment. Lancaster County Sheriff’s depu ties said they discovered about 30 Sigma Chi fraternity members en gaged in a historical fraternity cer emony last Thursday night, a half mile south of Highway 33 and SW 58th Street. No arrests were made regarding the ritual, which apparently included Con federate uniforms, sabers, rifles and the burning of a 6-foot cross, deputies said. Sigma Chi President Craig Vacek said the ceremony was not racially motivated, but a ritual to re-enact the founding of Sigma Chi by soldiers during the Civil War. “Our fault lies in the fact that we created the potential for this misunder standing and for that we are extremely apologetic,” Vacek said. “But the meaning of what we did remains the same, and is no way based «— Our fault lies in the fact that we created the potential for this misunderstanding and for that we are extremely apologetic " Craig Vacek Sigma Chi president \ in-racism in any way, shape or Form,” he said. According to a Sigma Chi ritual manual, the burning cross came from a Roman legend. Emporer Constantine en visioned a flaming cross the night before his army invaded Rome in A.D. 371. John Harris, special assistant to the vice chancellor for student affairs, said the symbolism of a burned cross can not be ignored by the campus commu nity. “I don’t think it has any small meaning at all,” Harris said. “For fra ternity members to not understand the reality of this symbolism troubles me.” Harris said he thought the frater- „ nity members would say they did not intend to hurt anyone with the ritual. “But how can we be sure?” Harris said. “They were willing to take a very strong stand in this ceremony with a 6-foot cross. “What’s next? Is somebody going to be up on this cross?” Harris said racism was a problem both in Lincoln and at UNL, and the fraternity should not bear the brunt of all backlash against racism. But the fraternity should be held Please see SIGMA CHI on 6 * . ' 'w ?: ■- ■ ■ By Erin Schulte Senior Reporter The civic responsibility of jury | duty clashed with the reality of stu S dent life at a judiciary committee | hearing Friday. Public testimony was heard on LB73, which would exempt full i time college students froua jury t duty ; r .".Ir; The bill was proposed by Sen. I . . y ; V tf;? _ ■ . By Matthew Waite . Senior Reporter -—----: The prosecution’s case against former NU winghack Rtiey Washing ton stinted to come to a close Monday afternoon with a series of chain-of evidence witnesses designed to intro duce physical parts of the case. The six evidential witnesses came after four long days filled with lengthy cross-examinations from defense attor neys of three prosecution witnesses— inducting one on Monday—who said Washington was the shooter. Defense attorneys were quick to point out that all three witnesses once said under bath they could not iden tify Washington as the shooter, then changed their stories. ~ r Washington is on trial for the Aug. 2, 1995 shooting of Jermaine Cole outside the Kwik Shop at 27th and W streets. He is charged with second-de gree attempted murder and use of a firearm to commit a felony. The chain-of-evidence witnesses introduced by Special Prosecutor Ronald Lahners included three police officers —TJhe first officer to respond, and two varaandled different pieces Linct^ppt^fce Officer Timothy Kennett was the first dispatched to the Rwik Shop, hut was quickly diverted to 835 N. 26th St., the apartment of Clarence Williams. Williams reported that a man who had been shot showed up:athis doo£. - - - • Williams testified that Cole was lying on his doorstep when he opened the door. “He asked me to ‘call the man,’” Williams said: “That’s the way he put it. “I said, ‘I don’t allow drunks in my.. house.’ He said, ‘I’m not drunk, Vic been shot.’” Please see TRIAL on 3