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UMd
President Vows Action
in Recent Racial Incident
By SARAH ANCHORS
Capital News Service
September 8, 1998
University of Maryland President Clayton
Daniel "Dan" Mote Jr. said he
was sickened by racial threats scrawled
on the dorm-room doors of two
African-American students and pledged to
find the culprits.
The two freshmen in Elkton hall on the
College Park campus awoke early Sept. 3
to find the word "kill" and
racial epithets written on their door
message boards, said university spokesman
George Cathcart.
"Frankly, this incident sickens
me," Mote wrote in an e-mail Sept. 7
to faculty and staff. "We will not
allow members of our family to be driven
away by such tactics."
Mote personally assured the two students,
who were badly shaken by the incident,
that he abhors such actions and that the
university will make all attempts to find
those responsible, Cathcart said.
He added those found guilty of the action
face campus sanctions up to expulsion.
University police have been questioning
students on the eighth floor of Elkton
where the incident occurred but do not
have a suspect, said Sgt.
Steven Kowa, spokesman for University
Police.
The culprit wrote the message between
1:30 and 6 a.m. on Sept. 3 - during the
first week of classes - and is probably a
student, Cathcart said.
The incident does not qualify as a hate
crime under Maryland law because there
was no property damage and the messages
did not give a specific threat to
students' welfare, Kowa said. The message
was easily wiped from an erasable board,
he said.
Eleven other incidents involving written
hateful messages have occurred on the
College Park campus since January, campus
police said.
African Americans make up 14.5 percent of
the 24,454 undergraduate
students on campus, according to fall
1997 figures. 1998 figures were not yet
available.
Black Student Union President Danielle
Gittens said this event and the others
"remind us that racism still
occurs."
University sophomore Nicole Pearson, who
lives on Elkton's eighth floor, said she
hadn't "heard of anything like this
happening before."
But, she said, "I am glad to see
it's getting so much attention."
Pearson said fliers describing the
incident were sent to students in her
dorm and that her floor planned to meet
and discuss what happened.
The message, one of Mote's first as
university president, comes as he tries
to build rapport with students and staff.
The former University of
California-Berkeley vice chancellor
joined the campus this summer as
president, after William E. Kirwan left
for Ohio State University. 
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