2B - The Michigan Daily Graduation Edition - Thursday, April 13, 2000 THE FINAL WALK Students settle into residence hall life OUTGOING .... -..- w- ... _..._ . .. . : s. .r... i .. a/ yr / 7ow ' v * Alr r 7r W immVrii iidmmhm Editor's Note: This article originally ran in the Sept. 3; 1996 issue of The Michigan Daily By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily Staff Reporter In his first few days on campus, Jacob Rodriguez has accumulated quite a poker debt. Due to a University housing shortage, Rodriguez had to bide his time playing card games - instead of unpacking - in the Bursley Residence Hall lounge that is his temporary home. RESIGNATION Continued from Page 1B exert more executive control over athletics. "I've said from the beginning that one of the things would not do is run the Athletic Department, Bollinger said. "It's simply not the role of the presiden of the University." Bollinger said he recognized the importance o deferring "in most instances to the judgements of indi vidual departments." But at the same time, he stressed the need for admin istrative participation in certain matters to allow for< collective decision-making approach.. "I do not want a University where various part simply decide how to deal with things, and th University, which we are supposed to represent it the central administration, is only informer about," Bollinger said. Rodriguez and nine others were given temporary housing in Bursley lounges, since approximately 5,300 students in the entering class have over- loaded all available University housing facilities. Eric Kuper's bed is pushed next to a black- board, and his desk is actually a study carrel. Kuper, a School of Music freshman, said he actu- ally likes the spacious lounge, but said the uncer- tainty of his position troubles him. "It's not knowing," Kuper said. "We could be here three days or three weeks. I want to unpack." Alan Levy, director of Housing public affairs, A source said the NCAA's recent investiga of Jamal Crawford's eligibility - and Bollin unawareness of it - was a factor in Goss' de ture. I "You can take any of the issues that have been r " in the media over the past two or three years. Ever it gle one of those issues has been a collective effl the part of the athletic department and on the pa f the administration" Bollinger said. i- "Take any of those issues, and you have Unive involvement." 1- Near the end of this academic term, Gossi a receive a lump sum of $280,500 and will no longe on the University payroll. s Bollinger named Bill Martin interim athl e director in March and plans to form a comm n to search for the University's tenth athletic di d tor. The appointment will be the secon Bollinger's three-year tenure. said all the residence halls have reached capacity this year. Even Baits and Oxford Housing, with lower occupancy rates, are completely filled. Now the University is facing a space crunch, with about 9,400 students demanding housing. Early this summer, the University tried to accommodate the extra students by putting "over- flow triples" into housing plans. "Some students simply don't show up to school because they spent their summer deciding to attend Harvard or Yale, but they didn't end their leases (before school started)," Levy said. Rooms unclaimed by today will be legally available for re-assignment, which should help alleviate the space squeeze. Those who have not been given rooms will get first priority when the two-week housing freeze on vacancies ends, Levy said. Communication troubles have also plagued the lounge lizards. Lounges are not equipped with telephones, so the students can't call home with- out going to a pay phone and have had to walk to many offices for information they could have easily gotten by phone. FILE PHOTO University President Lee Bollinger hired former Athletic Director Tom Goss in September 1997. But after being rocked by scandal and financial woes, Goss resigned this February. :. LAWSUIT Continued from Page 18 he was upset that minorities with lower qualifications gained acceptance to the University. With a GPA slightly under 3.4 and an ACT score of 28, Hamacher claims he was qualified for admission to the University. "I had seen other kids getting in, and they had much lower credentials than me," said Hamacher, who is currently a student at Michigan State University. Gratz, a Southgate resident who graduated with a 3.765 GPA and an ACT score of 25, said she hopes the lawsuit will change an admissions system that she believes is flawed. "I felt like there was a wrongdoing' Gratz said. "The poli- cies need to be changed so nobody has to go through what I went through." CIR spokesman Terry Pell said the lawsuit against the Uni- versity has the potential of setting a precedent similar to the Hopwood case. "The admissions system here is more egre- gious than the Hopwood case," Pell said. Whyman said she hopes this case will eliminate any pref- erential treatment received by minorities. "This is a big day for us, the people who are fighting dis- crimination," Whyman said. "We have good plaintiffs who were selected because they have outstanding cases. You want to have the strongest plaintiffs possible for this type of suit." Under the case of The University of California Board of Regents v. Bakke, which is the 1978 Supreme Court ruling that set current precedent in the area of affirmative action, a university or college may use race as one of many factors in admission. CIR's current lawsuit, however, claims "race was one of the predominant factors (along with scores on stan- dardized admissions tests and high school grades) used for determining admission." The complaint states that Gratz and Hamacher suffered "humiliation, emotional distress, and pain and suffering" as a result of being rejected. The suit demands that the court award the students financial compensation, declare that the Universi- ty's admissions policies violate the 14th Amendment and order the University to admit Hamacher as a transfer student. INCOMING Continued from Page 16 expenses, and 36.7 percent of those sur- veyed plan to get a part-time job. LSA freshman Katie Darner said she needed to work in the summer to help reduce her college costs. "I work two jobs in the summer" she said. "It's definitely always a concern." The University was more successful than other public universities in admit- ting community-service-minded stu- dents. More than 85 percent of respon- dents had participated in volunteer work in the past year, while 76.8 per- cent of students at other public univer- sities did community service. Darner said volunteering was a help- ful experience. "It made me thankful for what I have," Darner said. "It gave me a new perspective on things." In alcohol statistics, more Universi- ty incoming freshman reported having consumed hard liquor and wine, 59.8 percent, than beer, 53 percent. But Mary Lou Antieau, assistant to the vice president for student affairs, said students only had to drink once in the previous year to answer yes. Also, Antieau said many students drink very lightly to celebrate gradua- tion. "How many students had a glass of champagne after graduation?" she said. These alcohol statistics fall in line with other public universities that participated in the study. These institutions reported that slightly more students, 56. 1 percent of respondents, reported drinking beer while 58 percent had drank liquor or wine. LSA freshman Nikki Gunter was slightly surprised by the findings. "I would expect the beer to be high- er than the liquor. It just seems more common," she said. Fitness also was important to this freshman class, with only 2.6 per- cent reporting that they did not exercise. More than half the class, 51.8 percent, said they spend more than six hours per week exercising and playing sports. In addition to keeping fit, only 8.6 percent reported smoking cigarettes. A surprising statistic, according to Cherry Danielson, the graduate student research assistant who com- piled the University data, was that 67 percent of the class reported they had spent no time playing video games last year. "This says these students don't have a lot of time," Danielson said. equally memorable. Engineering senior James Schrader said he will always remember the days he spent in his resi- dence hall. "The time I was most happy, the time I really felt content with my choices in life was my freshman year at Couzens Hall," Schrader said. "I experienced many people and events that I w' always cherish. To this day, all of closest friends are people that I met in Couzens at that time." LSA senior Garth Heutel said he will be glad to move on, but he will miss things such as the walk to class. "I'll miss going to class and walking through the Diag and seeing people I know, nothing out of the ordinary. I'll never forget the sit in by the Students of Color Coalition in the (Michigan Union) tower. That was impressive exciting and I'll probably remembe forever," Heutel said. SNRE senior Joe Reilly said he will never forget the days the SCC occupied the tower of the Michigan Union. "I will always remember the 37 days that students came together to recognize the institutional racism inherent in Michigamua and the University and stood together in occupation of the Michigan Union tower," Reilly said. "The time spent in the tower was truly powerful as our love and accep- tance of all peoples tore down the walls of exclusion and oppression that for so long housed the secret tower societies,' he added. Former MSA president Bram Elias said he will never forget when the foot- ball team made it to the Rose Bowl "It was my sophomore year and we went to the Rose Bowl. I live in S- I Diego and had 30 people staying at 9. house. That was the year everyone kept pouring onto the field after games, and we all wanted to do that after the Rose Bowl, but it was harder because there were about 15 cops guarding us;' Elias said. "After the game we were all screaming because we were the champs, and then the team poured out of the locker room and stormed across the field, breaking through the cops. "I was in the front,*and I gave five To Brian Griese and Charles Woodson. It was total pandemonium. Then I grabbed onto Woodson's back and got a piggy back ride onto the field past all of the cops. I don't think Woodson noticed. I was so starstruck. I walked around the field, stole some astro turf and even hugged Goss. The entire experience was so exciting," Elias said. Engineering senior David Shay-said he will miss almost everything about t1 University next year. "I'll miss the events, the social activi- ties and the school atmosphere, but I'll be glad to be done with class. I've had a really great experience here," Shay said. While many seniors may regret that they didn't have enough time to accom- plish everything they set out to do, Phar- macy senior Kathryn Timberlake said she never did anything that she wo regret. "I do the things I am not sure about, because if I don't do them, I will regret it in the future;'Timberlake said. "So, I ran the Naked Mile. I rushed a sorority. I got football tickets all four years. I stayed up for 30 hours dancing for a good cause. I dated guys. I broke up with guys. I painted the rock. I stayed ap all night talking and I stayed up all night studying," she added. "I gave tours of campus and I hope that I made oth love their Michigan experience as muc as I loved mine!" BOLLINGER Continued from Page 18 A respected expert on the First Amendment, Bollinger said free and open expression is critical to the Univer- sity. "There's nothing I think that's mt important in the University ... than the sense of what we call academic free- dom," he said. "It has to be maintained at all costs." Bollinger said he is prepared to face future challenges, but that there is no need for widespread, radical change. He said "there is a public disenchantment with the ideal of higher education," not- ing public cynicism toward increasing tuition and quality teaching. B Bollinger said the University is mos' on the right track. "What these institutions do is funda- mentally sound and we should continue to do them," he said. 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