TEz £iDiTa &DITlg INEW STUDENT EDITION ;l' ""' " , % ' ). ': ' *'' .*" A \\J CCUJI Section Wednesday, September 3, 1997 Avoid the routine, seek the unique in your 'U'days y did you choose the University of Michigan?" It's a question you thought you would never hear again when you finally told everyone from high school that you decided to be a Wolverine. But, more realistically, it's a question you'll hear over and over again during your 4 (or maybe 5 or 6) years as an % rgraduate here in Ann Arbor. ou're lucky, though. You should never be without an answer. Perhaps you chose the University for the possibility to study almost any subject possible with 24,000 other undergraduates from every U.S. state and many countries around the world Perhaps you want to dress proudly in a maize and blue T-shirt and join 104;000 excited fans filing down State t to the tune of "Hail to the hors" on a sunny fall Saturday morning. Perhaps you aspire to be a doctor, and want to spend some free time learning from the leaders of the profes- sion at the University Hospital and Medical Center, one of the top medical schools in the country where almost JODI 900,000 patients S. COHEN are treated each COHEN'S year. CORNER Or perhaps you want to meet stu- dents with similar interests, and with more than 500 stu- dent organizations ranging from the A ti-Domestic Violence Group to the rski Club, you know the University is the place to be. Sounds like you picked the perfect place to live and study for the next few years, doesn't it? You did ... with one condition. The University can be all these things and more, but it's up to you to take full advantage of it. It's up to you to find the little treasures about the University that make each experience ue. You need to make your own personal map of the University, with your favorite spots along the expan- sive 2,500-acre campus, and your own guide to navigating to these places. You're bound to share some special spots along the path with crowds of other University students, like sharing a pitcher or two late at the Brown Jug with friends or skipping classes to hang out on the Diag on a sunny afternoon. Out there are also treasures that will be unique to each person, and it's your responsibility to fill in the legend to your individual map. The range of pos- sibilities is as diverse as the student population, ranging from taking classes with a special professor to becoming the leader of a campus group to finding the perfect fraternity during spring rush. The students who take the most from the University are those who take the time to try new experiences in *ch of their Ann Arbor treasures. Too many students spend their four years at the University without chal- lenging themselves. They take classes like Comm 100 and then go home to watch MTV They never get to know the Arb on the first day of spring or the white-light-lined trees on Main Street in the winter. They never sift carefully through the course guide, r izing they could never take all the ses they want in just four years. So instead of getting into a comfort- able routine, continue to explore dif- ferent parts of the University. Instead of sitting inside the Union to eat lunch, sit in Regents Plaza and watch as passersby spin the cube. Instead of taking the popular easy class, try something a little more challenging. There was a well-known speech at my high school that every incoming hman heard - "high school would be like your buffet. There were many things to pick and choose from. Keep going back for more." If my high school was a buffet, then the University is a hearty meal with unlimited courses. It's a buffet the size of 10 football fields at Michigan Stadium, or the length of 100 trips across the Diag. Try something new every day. Visit ifferent part of campus. Go to a few mass meetings during your first semester until you find the organiza- tion that's right for you. The students who benefit the most from the University continue to learn and dis- cover during their years here. They find that the University's trea- olli rs balance New '1 reient faces peril, promise By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter After a two-year absence, Lee Bollinger came home again. Bollinger, who served as Dartmouth College provost from 1994-96 and University Law Dean from 1987-94, stepped into the presidency on Feb. 1, arriving in the after- math of a year-long tempest of controversy surrounding the search to fill the post. But serving as president of an institution as complicated as the University can be a tempestuous task in itself. Pressure from alumni, politicians, students and the media is often intense. Bollinger's still-young term has already witnessed inevitable spells of controversy. As opinion on the new president's performance continues to coalesce, one thing remains clear: From managing the financial crisis at the University Medical Center to confronting controversy surrounding the Michigan men's basketball team, the pressures of the presidency remains constant. One perpetual pressure point is the national debate over affirmative-action poli- cies. Late this spring, four legislators in the Michigan House of Representatives called for the elimination of racial and ethnic preferences in deciding University admissions. The four legislators - Reps. David Jaye (R-Washington Twp.), Greg Kaza (R-Rochester Hills), Michelle McManus (R-Lake Leelanau) and Deborah Wyman (R-Canton Twp.) - encouraged aggrieved students to file a class-action lawsuit against the University. "(The University's administrators) are the most egregious user of these kind of policies, in my opinion," Kaza said. "They're bullies that are used to walking over 17- and 18-year-olds." WWe need a Bollinger, a vocal advocate of affirmative- action policies, defended the University's new master plan admissions standards.g "My belief is that the policies that the for achieving a University has followed are consistent with the Supreme Court precedents," Bollinger said. true sense o "They are consistent with our intellectual mis- unificatio f sion." Even before these complaints were leveled Lee Bollinger against University policies, issues of diversity in the student body were on the cutting edge of University president campus debate. Members of Latinas y Latinos Unidos for Change, a Latino/a student initia- tive, crashed an April reception between Bollinger and student leaders, bringing an abrupt end to the gathering. "The members of LUCha will no longer be kept down by the University's Eurocentric focus," said LUCha member Nora Salas, an RC senior. "At this time, we demand a meeting with President Bollinger." In a brief speech before the crowd, Bollinger said he would listen to the students and acknowledged their right to express their concerns. "I am very much in favor of student idealism and activism," Bollinger said. Bollinger has indicated that bringing the campus together is one of the primary goals of his presidency. As a presidential finalist in November 1996, Bollinger said he saw himself as someone who governs through consensus, rather than through an agenda. On April 9, he pledged a symbolic move to bring the presidency closer to the heart of campus. He announced that he would transfer the president's office from _the "bunker-like, repelling structure" of the Fleming Administration Building to a yet-to-be-determined building on Central Campus. "There has been some good work done on planning for the University campus, but we need a new master plan for achieving a true sense of unification," Bollinger said. "More than a bridge to the 21st century, we need a bridge to Palmer Field." Bollinger did not specify where his new offices will be located, and is yet to release the specifics of the transfer. But the symbolism behind the declaration struck a chord with members of the Board of Regents. Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) supported Bollinger's decision to relo- cate the President's office. "It is an apt metaphor for his larger point," McGowan said. "The point that we need a more human and engaged face by the leadership towards the various-people who make up the University." Nearly from the start, Bollinger has enjoyed a good working relationship with the Board of Regents, whose rapport with former President James Duderstadt was noto- riously strained. Immediately after taking office, Bollinger established a compensa- tion policy for the University's top executives. Many of the regents were vocally angry after learning the details of salary agreements between Duderstadt and top University officials. Bollinger has also impressed many student leaders. Like McGowan, Michigan See BOLLINGER, Page 7C Above: WARREN ZINN/Daily Left: MARGARET MYERS/Daily Above: President Lee Bollinger (right) walks near Regents' Plaza with Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison and wife Jean Bollinger, soon after being named University president. Left: Bollinger stands outside the president's official residence on South University Avenue. Bollinger assumed the office of president on February I this year. Messy crows flock to U' perches Droppings, cawing are murder for disgusted 'U' students By Daniel Nolan Daily Staff Reporter Caw, Caw! A murder of crows that circle each night outside Angell Hall and around the Diag - with their cackling calls and noisy flapping of wings - has been plaguing students. And then there are the droppings. The women who live in nearby Betsy Barbour residence hall said they're especially affected by the crows' habits. "I think someone should get a BB- gun," said Betsy Barbour resident and LSA first-year student Melita Alston. "I've been pooped on before. They are awful." Other Barbour residents said even a love for animals doesn't stifle their scorn for the "Betsy Birds." "Normally I'm all good about birds and everything, but I think they're a schedule. "I've been wok by them because Dewitt said abou until early mornir Other students are alarmed abou Rackham Goodman said she felt the crows were "follow in g her," because of their sheer numbers and ominous pres- ence. The roost out- side Angell Hall can be crowded with, "up to 10,000 crows," campus, including protection from ken up in the morning predators - mainly owls. The lighting they are really loud," and tall trees outside of Angell Hall also t the crows that stay make it an ideal spot for crows to land, ng Kulesza said. on campus said they But Kulesza said the crows' stay in t the crows as well. Ann Arbor is only temporary; they gen- student Amanda erally leave by the end of March. "They are winter roosts WI think someone only," Kulesza said. should get a BBwgun. ... They are a menace." -Melita Aiston LSA first-year student The campus crows, or C o r v u s brachyrhyn- chos, spend their evenings on campus from November to said Rackham student Cynthia Sims Parr, an expert on the Ann Arbor birds. Parr recently completed her dissertation on the local crows. "A lot of these birds are migrants, but local birds participate too," Parr said. about mid- March. They are diurnal and omnivorous, which means they will eat anything and spend their days scavenging for food, Kulesza said. The birds even have their own daily schedule, according to Janet Henshaw, I I ..::e' N