Ev 'Ela 74Vrn9- News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 76440554 One hundred seven years ofeditorialfreedom Thursday October 30, 1997 First-year enrollment hits new high By Janet Adamy aily Staff Reporter With the largest first-year class ever, University enrollment reached record levels this year, according to an official student count r sed Tuesday. The class of 2001 has 5,534 students - 207 more than the fall 1996 entering class. Associate Provost Lester Monts said the increase was not intentional, but the result of an inability to predict how many accepted students would decide to enroll in the University. "We always accept more students than we even- tually enroll," Monts said. "(This year) we had more students send in enrollment deposits than we expected." *hile the number of minority students remained relatively stable, the number of stu- dents whose primary racial identity is unknown grew substantially, from 1,326 students in 1996 to 1,679 students, or 5.1 percent of the entering class. Monts said the increase was not affected by recent attention to race-based admissions as a result of anti-affirmative action lawsuits against the University of Texas and the passage of California's Proposition 209. "I think that a lot of students resent the whole notion of racial categories to start with," Monts said. "A lot of students don't feel that the racial categories designated by the state and federal gov- ernments apply to them." Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison attributed the jump to an increased atten- tion to race nationwide. "The general discussion of race in this coun- try has led a lot of people to think about how they mark these boxes," Harrison said. "I think' more people are reflecting on the nature of their own race, and that's manifested in this trend." Harrison also said he is concerned about the increase in the size of the incoming classes over the past eight years. "1 can understand that this year we jumped up, but since this has been happening over the last eight years, we should have a discussion about how big we want to be as a university," Harrison said. The number of international students grew from 3,200 in 1996 to 3,371 this fall, or 9.1 percent of the student body. "The reputation of the University of Michigan as a premier, outstanding institution is worldwide," Monts said. "I'm sure news of the education our alums received here is being passed on to others in various parts of the world." Enrollment statistics break down in the follow- ing ways: While the student .body contains about 2,000 more men than women, the incoming first-year class was evenly split between between genders. * Enrollment of black students dipped slightly, from 2,870 in 1996 to 2,842, making up 8.6 per- cent of the student body. The overall number of white students also declined, from 22,826 in 1996 to 22,761 - or 69.5 See ENROLLMENT, Page 7A F t-yeq nro IIment Enrollment numbers for this year's incoming class surged to more than 5,500, reaching an all-time high for first-year students. i- v '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 JON WEITZ/Daily Clinton-Jiang meeting has positive tones SARA STILLMAN/Da Gal and Dave Easterbrook, along with their son Adam, who is holding a picture of is sister Ashley, are establishing a scholarship for a sophomore in the School of Nursing program in memory of their daughter, who would have been a first-year Nursing student this fall. lund memIONizes inComing U' student US.-Sino summit con- cludes with agreements on wide range of issues The Washington Post WASHINGTON - President Clinton and Chinese President Jiang Zemin concluded a summit meeting yesterday by reaching agreements on a broad range of security, economic, environmental and law-enforcement issues, even as they acknowledged stark and seemingly irrec- oncilable differences over human rights. The summit, the first between the; United States and China since 1989, culminaied a long effort to restore rela- tions disrupted by Jiang Beijing's crackdown that year on pro- democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. At a news confer- ence with Jiang, Clinton hailed the out- come as offering "the opportunity and responsibility to build a future that is more secure, more peaceful, more pros- perous for both our people." Yet the human rights issue, which both leaders had sought to prevent from dominating the agenda, surfaced vivid- ly during the press conference, when Jiang defended the crackdown and Clinton, standing stiffly at his side, replied that on human rights China is "on the wrong side of history." On other subjects, the summit meet- ing gave both leaders much of what they said they wanted. Clinton won Chinese commitments to cooperate with the United States on a range of issues and move closer to full participa- tion in global arrangments for arms control and trade. And Jiang, who has sought the inter- national status achieved by the late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping during a U.S. visit nearly two decades ago, got the red-carpet welcome and 21-gun salute he had coveted. The day was crowned by a White House state dinner attended by American executives of some of the world's richest corpora- tions, a testament to China's growing clout as an emerging economic power. In their private conversation, as described by senior officials, and in their news conference, Clinton and Jiang struck opposing positions on the question of individual freedoms and the right of political dissent. Jiang publicly defended the 1989 crackdown by say- ing that "the Chinese Communist Party of China and the Chinese government have long drawn the correct conclusion on this political disturbance." Despite this unusual display of dis- cord between heads of state who other- wise were proclaiming their mutual esteem, the summit unfolded mostly along the lines senior administration officials had predicted. The, overall result appears to be the one Clinton wanted: a network of expanding politi- cal, military and economic ties that could usher in a new era of cooperation between two countries long at odds. The two presidents said in a joint statement that despite their differences they "are determined to build toward a constructive strategic partnership :. through increasing cooperation to meeting international challenges and promote peace and development in the world" - a declaration that hardly See CHINA, Page 2A By Alero Fregene Daily Staff Reporter. Early this year, Ashley Easterbrook gained admis- sion into the University's School of Nursing. But today she's not eating in the dining hall or rushing back and forth to class. In June, days before her graduation from Troy High School, Ashley and her two friends, Andrew Stindt and Michael Jamieson, were killed in a car ccident when a drunken driver slammed into her ontiac Grand Prix. -Her parents, David and Gail Easterbrook, set up a memorial scholarship fund to fulfill Ashley's dreams to being a nurse. The fund will benefit a University Nursing student and area Troy high school students. "The reason we set this up is that Ashley had a dream to serve others. But since she can't do this,, obviously, we thought we'd do it for her,' David Easterbrook said. School of Nursing staff members remembered Ashley from her interview and look forward to working with the Easterbrook family. "It was evident in my conversations with Ashley that she reflected the values, love and support strengthened by a lifetime of close family ties," said Dr. Suzanne Boehm, Nursing assistant dean for stu- dent affairs. LSA first-year student Anne Kozowicz, Ashley's best friend, said the scholarship fund is exactly what Ashley would have wanted. "Ashley loved to help others. That's what makes the scholarship fund so great, because she enjoyed helping people." Kozowicz said. "It's like continuing her helping. She would have been so honored to know that people would do this for her." There will be four scholarships awarded from the Ashley Easterbrook Memorial scholarship fund. Two $2,000 scholarships will be awarded to gradu- ating seniors from Troy High School, one $1,000 scholarship will go to a Troy Athens High School graduating senior, and one $1,000 scholarship will benefit a Nursing sophomore. David Easterbrook said graduating seniors are eli- gible for the scholarships if they work hard and maintain a GPA of 3.74 or lower. "Ashley always said that unless you were a 3.75 or greater you couldn't get a scholarship. My daughter See SCHOLARSHIP, Page 2A LOOKING FOR THE 'REAL' THING Studen search erard Cohen-Vrignaud Staff Reporter Ditance and long lines did n( would-be TV stars from swarm Caeyesterday in hopes of m MTV An eclectic bunch gathered the~ltcal bar as early as 8 a.m. t Rea-World - Seattle" and popular MTV programs feat style footage of people living t 1 cross-country. Structured i -participants live, sociali quarrel in front of television ca Stardom and adventure see minds of most students waiting "Of course, being on TV said Eastern Michigan U Riiidee Crumb. "I think it w inla house with people who ts pack bar in of MTV fame from 500 to 700 - to the hopefuls waiting in line. No show officials were available last ot stop hundreds of night to give definite numbers about the Ling at Touchdown turnout.. taking a splash on The highest turnout for auditions this year was 700 in Washington, D.C. inside and outside After a lengthy wait, some students expressed o audition for "The frustration with the brief interviews. "Road Rules." The "It was very short. After four hours of waiting, ture documentary- you get interviewed for only five minutes," said ogether and travel- LSA senior Andrea Muray. n a soap opera for- "Real World" Director Craig Borders said he ze and frequently was looking for "dynamic people." imeras. . "We want someone who's going to stand out in med to be on the a group," Borders said. "Obviously, we don't want to be interviewed. only loud, obnoxious people" is very exciting," It was doubtful, however, whether even the most niversity student outgoing could make themselves heard in the ould be fun to live noisy bar. are totally differ- The atmosphere inside Touchdown Cafe was Oesterling fined, license revoked By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter Former University Chief of Urology Joseph Oesterling, whose medical license was temporarily sus- pended in August, learned Tuesday that his license will be revoked for four months and that he will be fined $5,000. The Michigan state Board of Medicine issued an order Tuesday imposing this penalty, along with a two-year proba- tion. The order also forces the doctor, who pleaded no contest to felony charges of billing fraud in June, to take classes in medical ethics and inform the board of his income every three months. Following his felony conviction, Oesterling's license was suspended in August, in accordance with Michigan state law. An administrative law judge reinstated it tem- porarily. Oesterling had been allowed to practice until Tuesday. Oesterling, once considered among of the nation's leading prostate-cancer experts, resigned from his duties at the I inherit in the wake of an eight-month investigation of his