eather onight: Mostly cloudy with urries, in the lower 30s. omorrow: Partly cloudy, w around 20°. 1£.'EAn t1 One hundredfve years of editorialfreedom Friday March 22, 1996 ,VOL?'l, O. oposal to Report due this summer would require first-year students to participate y Jodi Cohen aily Staff Reporter influential University committee will rec- mmend this summer that all first-year students be equired to enroll in a living-learning community, erhaps as early as fall 1997. Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen iartford, who has previously advocated the ex- ansion of living-learning programs, appointed he 18-member task force and charged them with inding ways to expand and improve the pro- rams. "If you choose to live on campus, you will be ired to live in one of the communities," said SPECIAL SERIES 1,1e m i es ~Beginning Monday,e i n a William Zeller, director of Housing and chair of the task force. "But the option to live on campus or off campus is there for first-year students." Only about 3 percent of all first-year students live in off-campus housing. "Virtually all the fresh- men wind up living with us," said Housing Pro- gram Director Edward Salowitz. The living-learning task force will work during the next few months to finish developing themes for the various programs. "The University feels strongly enough about this that this will be the type of housing provided," Zeller said. "We are trying to develop a scheme that will accommodate 5,000 students." Currently, the University has five living-learn- ing communities, including the Honors Program, the Residential College, the 21st Century Pro- gram, the Pilot Program and the Women In Sci- ence and Engineering Program. A section of the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program will join the group in the fall. Zeller said he is not yet sure when the living- learning requirement would begin. "At the very earliest, we are looking at '97," he said. LSA junior Randall Juip, vice president of the Residence Halls Association and a task force member, said students will benefit from this requirement. "The first-year students a lot of times don't know what the University has to offer," Juip said. "They will introduce students into a specialized environment so they can get the most out of their first year. These programs will give students the skills and techniques necessary to be good stu- dents;" Juip said the task force will recommend that a program be located in each residence hall. He also said the committee is considering about 20-23 different programs, but plans to narrow the list down to 16-- one for a section of each residence hall. The programs range from a focus on community service and leadership skills to minority issues. Many of the communities also will teach studying and test-taking skills, Juip said. "For students to get the maximum benefit, it would have to be a requirement," he said. "It is one of those things that you might not like at the time, but you might look back and be glad you did it." Zeller said the structure of the programs also will differ. "Some will be more intense than oth- ers," he said. "Some will be more academically focused. Some will be more educationally fo- cused." Zeller said some communities maybe geared more toward an academic concentration instead of a See HALLS, Page 2 feature a week-long. series taking a look at "What's New in Undergraduate Education." Some issues to be covered in the five- part series include changes and new initiatives in: a living-learning programs graduate student instructor training community service learning language across Sthe curriculum /f the influence of technology Duderstadt pledges to support diversity y Katie Wang )illy Staff Reporter In light of a court decision ruling igainst race-based admissions to uni- /ersities in the jurisdiction of the 5th 0. Circuit Court of Appeals, Univer- ity President James Duderstadt issueda tatement yesterday reaffirming the niversity's commitment to diversity. "I do not hesitate to say the Univer- ity of Michigan considers race along ith a range of other factors when en- olling students. And we will continue o do so," Duderstadt said in a written tatement. On Tuesday, the court voted unani- isly in the case Hopwood v. Texas that h niversity ofTexas could not use race is a factor in their admissions decisions. The appeals panel ruled that the Uni- ersity of Texas Law School could not 'give preferences to black or Hispanic tudents in admissions as part ofa strat- egy to increase racial diversity." Tito Garcia, a senior at UT-Austin vho is waiting to hear if he will be dmitted to its law school, said he will mediately affected by the court's ecision. "I'm shocked and disappointed," arcia said. "We need to wake up to the larm that the 5th Circuit's decision has aised in our community." Citing the landmark 1978 Bakke case, vhich stated that in the interest of pro- noting diversity on campus, race could be a factor among many in admissions ecisions, University of Texas Chancel- lor William Cunningham said Tuesday's sion was a step backward. The University ofTexas is "saddened by the 5th Circuit's sweeping determi- nation that Bakke is no longer the law of he land and that past racial discrimina- tion and diversity no longer justify af- firmative action in admissions," Cunningham said. Duderstadt's plan to increase minor- ity enrollment at the University, the higan Mandate, calls for the use of We-based admissions policies here. Under the Mandate, minority student enrollment has more than doubled since See DIVERSITY, Page 2 ANSING (AP) - A circuit judge terday removed a key roadblock to a new baseball stadium in Detroit, ruling that a state fund had the authority to provide $55 million for stadium con- struction. "The funds can go forward. ... These arenot state funds," said InghamCounty Circuit Judge James Giddings. Giddings ruled that the money in- volved never legally became state funds, said the Michigan Strategic Fund s authorized to transfer the money for stadium construction. The lawsuit was one of the last re- maining hurdles to getting the stadium plan off the ground. On Tuesday, 81 percent of Detroit residents voted against reversing a city PU DANCN .A Prof. John Perpener teaches a master class at the school of dance yesterday. He is visiting with the Alvin Alley American Dance Teatre's In-Residency assistant professor of dance at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and is an expert in early African American modern dance. - s sE Phto ty ARAETMYRSDal c1 Samne-sex benefits may lead to cuts State committee adds amendment that could alter school funding By Jeff Eldridge Daily Staff Reporter TheUniversity's policy of extending health benefits to same-sex couples drew fire from the state's Senate Appropria- tions Committee on Wednesday. The committee, in a 7-6 vote, ap- proved an amendment to the $1.5-bil- lion higher education appropriations package. The amendment would re- scind taxpayer funds equal to the amount colleges pay for domestic partner health benefits. The University Board of Regents ini- tial ly extended the benefits in a 6-2 vote in November 1994. State Sen. Bill Schuette (R-Midland), who co-sponsored the amendment with Sen. George McManus (R-Traverse City), said taxpayers should not fund benefits for same-sex relationships. "Marriage is recognized as being gan State University, where the Board of Trustees is considering extending benefits similar to the ones offered here. Smith said there "are trustees at MSU who are uncomfortable making that decision" and might have asked state legislators to take the issue into their hands. "We have people up here posturing on family values, and then find a situa- tion where they're invading people's privacy in a punitive sanction," Smith said. Smith said the amendment was dis- cussed for 20 minutes before approval. Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) said she is determined to main- tain benefits in same-sex partnerships "We are a long way from this being enacted," McGowan said. "I expect the University to make a forceful case against this." Ronni Sanlo, director of the University's Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Programming Office, said the amend- ment sends "a message of hate." "They're denigrating the excellent between two mem- bers of the oppo- site sex," Schuette said. "(The ben- efits) seem an in- appropriate expen- diture of public money." Regent Daniel Horning (R-Grand Haven) said he fa- vors the Schuette- McManus amend- ment. Horning, who came to the board after the re- gents voted to ex- tend the health ben- efits, said the re- gents overstepped their bounds in of- fering the insurance. "We are a long way from this being enacted. l expect the University to make a forceful case work and pro- ductivity of les- bian, gay, bi- sexual anc transgenderec people on (the state's) cam- puses," Sank said. Assoc iatc Vice President for University Relations List Baker would no° against f i Ks stadium funing Tiger Stadium Funds Yesterday, Judge James Giddings 5 attorney for the Tiger Stadium Fan Club Inc., which filed the suit. "We're going to sit down and talk about it," said state Sen. George Hart (D-Dearborn) a plaintiff in the suit. "We have 21 days to file an appeal. We want to see if we have the foundation for an appeal." James Tervo, executive assistant to Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer, said he was excited by the ruling. "The judge understood the impor- tance for an expedited ruling," he said. "This is it. Everything else is in place." The Strategic Fund put $55 million into a bank account last fall to cover its share of stadium costs. The money con- sists of $26 million from Indian casino profits, $19 million diverted from a could do with the money, about half of which was received from Indian casino operations. Giddings, in ruling from the bench, noted the money was "never in the state treasury." "They are private funds, ... not state funds subjectto appropriations," he said. "These are private funds, in my view, ending up in the Michigan Strategic Fund." Pat Masserant, spokesperson forGov. John Engler, praised the ruling. "We're pleased, obviously, but it doesn't come as a big surprise," she said. "We expected this decision. This was such a clear-cut case he (Giddings) didn't have a choice," she said, adding that "there's no room for appeal." ruled the Michigan Strategic Fund has the authority to transfer an additional $55 million to the stadium fund. "I don't think it was right for a uni- versity board to deal with an issue like this, when the laws of the state of Michigan do not recognize domestic partners as a married couple," Horning said. Horning said he wanted to testify before the committee to encourage them to pass the amendment, but was unable to attend because of prior obli- gations. Sen. Joe Conroy (D-Flint) said the amendment may be in violation of a clause in the Michigan constitution guaranteeing public universities au- tonomy from the state in determining their policies. "The Legislature's not supposed to be instructing the University on specif- ics," Conroy said. "That is dictated by the (state) constitution. The amendment is probably illegal on its face." But Schuette said the Legislature has a responsibility to see public money is spent wisely. "You (the taxpayers) have a right to have your legislators have some ac- countability for how money is being 'his.." comment or whetherthe Uni- Regent Rebecca versitymightul- McGowan timately chal- D-Ann Arbor lenge the amendment in L legal case. "It's very early in the legislative pro- cess," Baker said. "We certainly hope to have the opportunity to make our views known." Smith said the regents should di- rectly confront the matter. "Ican't imagine the board would no take a unified vote of all eight of it members, if this amendment become: law, to challenge its constitutionality,' Smith said. "I can't believe they would sit or their hands and let this challenge to it: authority go uncountered." Schuette said that if the Universit: wants to continue extending health ben. efits to unmarried partners, they shouk raise student fees or tuition. He said ht is a backer of the University and tha this amendment shouldn't be viewed a an attack against it. "The decision the University regent made some time ago was unwise, Schuette said. Horning also said his views shouldn' be seen as undermining the University', funding. "I don't want to get between the ap- propriations process and the Univer could start any kind of construction." The battle is one of several going on across the country as sports team own- ---- -_ _ .... 1.a ,..., ..a ,., , .. ,I I