News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 764-0554 Ito t w' IP2 itl a till One hundred seven years of edzriaifreedom Wednesday February 11, 1998 } y.. WJ ,. te. 4 3t -.: r u ..:: '. 2 . . '.:. ^ ....i' 4... .. N < P .? U~ T "' r u v3 r 4r : l, ,O ., .'Q .J. ' legal co By Peter Romer-Friedman Powell's opir Daily Staff Reporter race could b More than 300 students and faculty mem- the admissio bers crammed into Hale Auditorium yester- admit, we 1 day to hear Liz Barry, interim co-general Michigan edu council for the University, speak about the ty something lawsuits challenging the University's use In Octob race in the admissions process. Rights, a nom Barry began the panel discussion by giv- the first law ing a synopsis of the legal history of affirma- College of L tive action and defending the University's the second admissions policies. December, "Our practices do conform to the prece- University h dent set by (the Bakke v. the University of white clients California at Davis) case," said Barry in Provost Na regard to Supreme Court Justice Lewis Lehman and ousing to aid in voter egistration y Mike Spahn aily Staff Reporter In an attempt to increase voter registration among niversity students, University Housing will begin sending toter registration forms with leases sent to new students. By presenting the voter registration card to a student efore coming to the University, "the student will have the rimary information needed to register- their address," said n Levy, director of Housing public affairs. oice Your Vote, a student group on campus, conceived the 'dea for the initiative when the group evaluated its 1996 voter egistration drive. Ryan Friedrichs, co-founder of Voice Your Vote, said the rive registered 6,500 students, which was one of the highest otals in the country. But the group wanted to find additional ays to reach more of the University's 36,000 students. "There's something structurally wrong with the process if e're one of the best groups in the country and we only get bout 7,000 students (to register)," Friedrichs said. Friedrichs said the group then decided to act on the idea, which Housing just recently approved. Student leases mailed this spring will include the cards and an explanatory letter from Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford. "The things that we will be pushing are both civic engagement and the fact that voting is a part of the education at a public university like Michigan," Hartford said. "We are training citizens here" ord The registration push is part of a plan to boost overall voter participation in the ommunity, Levy said. "We're working with Voice Your Vote to do what we can to acilitate civic involvement among students," Levy said. The plan may include sending forms to as many as 10,000 f the University's 36,000 students, Levy said. LSA first-year student Ron Leibovitch said he has never reg- 'stered to vote, but the new plan may encourage him to do so. "I've been too lazy to go out of my way to register. The pportunity never came up," Leibovitch said. Friedrichs said he hopes the plan will encourage students *gister in Ann Arbor, rather than in their hometowns. "Students are a lot more likely to actually vote if they can alk down in their pajamas in their dorm to cast a vote," riedrichs said. Levy said the push to register students will not end with his plan. "We're also discussing a way to tap current stu- ents," Levy said. This initiative will allow VYV to focus on other goals, rather han put all of its resources into the registration drive. "We have three goals - to register, educate and motivate," riedrichs said. "We can now devote more resources to the nd two parts.' -Friedrichs said low voter turnout, including the 20-percent tudent showing in the 1994 election, has left student issues in he background. He said this plan should make student issues ore important in the eyes of local and state politicians. "An increase in student turnout will bring student issues to he forefront," Friedrichs said. Look out! It's Oscar! Nominatons for the 70th Annual Academy Awards were announced yes- terday and James Cameron's "Ttanic," with a record-tying 1 nods has its eyes of the prize. P Ve a unsel discusses lawsuits nion in Bakke, which stated that e used as one of many factors in ns process. "Every student we believe, will benefit from a ucation and offer the communi- as well." er, the Center for Individual n-profit legal organization, filed wsuit against the University's iterature, Science and Arts, and against the Law School in claiming in both that the ad discriminated against their on the basis of their race. ancy Cantor, Law Dean Jeffrey Business Dean B. Joseph White joined Barry to discuss the lawsuits and reaf- firm the University's commitment to diversity. Barry said she welcomed the Citizens for Affirmative Action's Preservation's motion last week to intervene in the lawsuit against LSA. CAAP is a newly formed coalition of lawyers, national organizations and high school students. "We recently received a motion to inter- vene and we will be filing our response to that motion sometime soon," Barry said. "The intervention is supportive to what we're doing in our program so we welcome it." In an attempt to prove to the crowd that the University's admissions policies are within the parameters of the Bakke verdict, Barry explained the admissions policies of both LSA and the Law School. She said the University has not used separate admissions committees for minority students when reviewing applica- tions, as the University of California at Davis Medical School did, which served as a decid- ing factors in the Bakke case. "We look at our applications on an indi- vidual basis," said Barry, referring to the LSA admissions process. "About one-third are accepted or rejected outright. The rest are reviewed on an individual basis." Barry said CIR is not interested in the details of how race is used in the admissions process, but rather hopes to dismantle affir- mative action altogether, as it did in the Fifth See PANEL, Page 7 ALLISON CANTOR/Daily Law Dean Jeffrey Lehman speaks yesterday during a panel on the two lawsuits targeting University admissions. Sweet Emotion Coalition to devote funds, ma npower By Katie Plona Daily Staff Reporter Several national organizations that have long been at the forefront of issues surrounding racial justice and civil liberties said they will devote as much money and manpow- er as is necessary to fight to retain the use of race as a factor in the University's admissions processes. The three groups - the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund - are leading a coalition that filed a motion this past Thursday to intervene in the lawsuit filed against the University that chal- lenges its use of race as a factor in the admissions processes of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. National members of the coalition, Citizens for Affirmative Action's Preservation, said they cannot predict how much their involvement in the case would cost. But money is not their pri- mary concern, members said, even though they will be responsible for all legal expenses accrued during the potentially lengthy lawsuit. "It's very difficult to say how much litigation will cost," said Deborah Archer, a staff attorney with the nation- al legal department of the ACLU. "We're more concerned about educa- tional opportunities for African 4* WARREN ZINN/Daily Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler screams into a microphone last night during a performance at the Palace of Auburn Hills. See Friday's Daily for a review of the show. rsoners artwork on display By Reilly Brennan Daily Staff Reporter Hundreds of University students, faculty and Ann Arbor residents browsed the artwork of more than 100 prisoners in the Rackham gal- leries yesterday. "I can just look at some of the pieces in this room and feel the anguish and pain that the artist went through. This is truly a moving exhibit," said Ann Arbor resident Page Skelton. The annual event, which was started three years ago by English Prof. Buzz Alexander, showcases artwork by prison inmates from more than 25 Michigan prisons. Catherine Scott, the mother of showcasing artist Tracy Neal, said the exhibit has devel- oped her daughter's talents in a way that she didn't think was possible. "Tracy has hidden talents that I didn't know about," said Scott as she stood in front of a mural created by her daughter. "She didn't even know that she had these talents, either." Alexander teaches two classes, English 310 and 319, which bring groups of students to prisons across the state to talk with inmates and participate in creative workshops. American and Latino students than the financial costs of protecting their rights." Theodore Shaw, associate director- counsel of the NAACP LDF, said fund- ing for the national organizations, all of which are non-profit, comes mostly from outside sources. "They are funded through individual contributions, through foundations and, to some degree, fundraising," Shaw said. CAAP members said the unification of the three organizations strengthens the coalition's cause, which is to main- tain the University's admissions prac- tices in order to make higher education accessible to minority students. "It makes sense to pool our resources, and I just don't mean finan- cially, but the brain power," said Patricia Mendoza, counsel for MALDEF's midwest region. ACLU senior staff counsel Chris Hansen said it is not uncommon for these three groups to work together, but it is unique that the organizations are appointing such experienced members to head the project. The lawsuit, which was filed by the Center for Individual Rights in October on the behalf of two white applicants who claim LSA's admissions proce- dures discriminated against them, "is a bit unusual in the degree to which all See COALITION, Page 7 State to look into Ge stering plactice By Katie Piona Daily Staff Reporter Former University Chief Urologist Joseph Oesterling, who resigned in July after University officials discov- ered his trail of billing fraud, is under- going a state investigation into allega- tions surrounding his clinical practice. Tom Lindsay, director of Michigan's Office of Health Services in the Department of Consumer & Industry Services, said parts of the exploration are already underway. "We're in the process of the investi- gation,"' Lindsay said. "It will be sever- al months before we decide if we have significant grounds to do anything." Lindsay said he could not elaborate on which areas of Oesterling's practice will receive scrutiny during the coming months, but said the examination will not focus on claims of financial impropriety, as did the previous investigation. While searching through Oesterling's billing records during an investigation last year, University offi- Catherine Scott gazes at artwork created by her daughter Tracy Nell. She is joined by children Anas and Azeezah at the opening of the 3rd Annual Michigan Prisoner Art Show. Alexander said. "We are always very respectful of them and their talents. We believe that the work is always about them and their stories - and not about us." Since it was first started, the program has skyrocketed in size. This year, prison- ers submitted nearly 200 works of art - 70 more than they did last year. The walls of the Rackham gallery displayed 180 of these works yesterday. Janie Paul, a lecturer in the School of Art program are helping to develop their future. "Through this program, we are seeing the development of art and the artists involved," she said. Ypsilanti resident Ester Stevens said she came to see the exhibit because she has a friend whose work is on display this month. "I'm happy to see this take place," Stevens said. "You can tell the feelings of the artists just by looking at the expressions on the faces in the paintings." ... :