LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 16, 2001-- 3A Students cited for alcohol in Mary Markley A student in Mary Markley Resi- dence Hall was transported to the University Hospitals Emergency Room early yesterday morning, according to Department of Public Safety reports. , DPS found two subjects intoxicat- ed, one was taken to UMER and the other arrested for Minor in Possession of Alcohol. *woman reports domestic assault A male resident of Northwood 'housing on North Campus assaulted 'his wife after the two had an argu- ment Sunday evening, DPS reports "state. The couple spent the night apart following the incident. Their I1- ear-old son was home during the Coupon solicitors violate ordinance in Bursley halls A resident of Bursley Residence Hall complained of solicitors Sunday afternoon, DPS reports state. DPS responded to the call, but the *subjects, who had been sliding pizza coupons from DaVinci's under doors in Bursley had dispersed. Soliciting in buildings violates an ordinance. Student made ill due to. alcohol Huron Valley Ambulance transport- ed an intoxicated student to the Uni- versity Hospitals' Emergency Room early Sunday morning, according to DPS reports. A residence hall adviser in Burs- ley called DPS after finding a female student passed out. The sub- ject was vomiting and determined to be highly intoxicated, according to the report. *Escapee from juvenile facility ,not yet found An Arbor Heights resident escaped early Sunday morning, according to DPS reports. 1 A male resident left via a fire escape and headed toward Mary OMarkley Residence Hall. He left a note behind stating that he may tharm himself. The subject was still .At large. Female student swallows ring A female in East Quad Residence Hall was escorted to the University Hospitals Emergency Room after Oswallowing a ring late Saturday night, bPS reports state. Male subject :found urinating on Hill Street " DPS officers found a man urinat- ing behind the Pound House on Hill *Street early Saturday morning, reports state. Officers approached the man and determined that he was a minor and intoxicated. Subjects use West Hall rooms 'for recreation Subjects have been unlawfully using rooms in West Hall for recre- ational purposes, according to DPS reports. University staff members -have found cigarette butts, food wrap- pers and urine on the floor of rooms in Vest Hall. - Compiled by Daily News Editor Jaimie Winkler. Conyers discusses affirmative action, Bush N Event provides a forum for promoting the University's position on affirmative action By Louie Meizlish Daily Staff Reporter "Happy Birthday, Martin Luther King," said Rep. John Conyers, the congressman who first introduced legislation to make King's birthday a national holiday, during a speech yesterday at the Law Quad. The gathering at Hutchins Hall, which was largely a rally for the University in support of its stance on affirmative action, attracted about 150 people. Shanta Driver, national director of United for Equality and Affirmative Action, said the lawsuit, which goes'to trial beginning today, will be "the most important case certainly of the new century." "For the first time, the very criteria that are used in the admissions pro ized tests, GPA, will be scr dents will be able to sta criteria that are infectedv infected w ver said. While t introduc focused n mative issues, C( the scope such topi i ng p r es effect on Conyers movement Referri elect Bush's choices for his( (D-Detroit) said, "It's ali dream, all these people he'sd When questioned follow Conyers added that he did n Bush's plan to implement a cess ... standard- without the use of quotas, dubbed "affirma- utinized and stu- tive access." nd up to ... the "That's something he made out of thin air with racism and to explain the fact that he's against affirma- ith sexism," Dri- tive action. Nobody's ever heard of it before." Conyers said it was often difficult to coin- he speakers that bat racial injustice and inequality during the ed Conyers last six years of President Clinton's presiden- mostly on affir- cy because of the Republican domination in action-related Congress. onyers broadened "You can use the bully pulpit all you want of his speech to but when the whip, (Texas Rep. Tom) Delay, cs as the incom- is keeping people in line on the Republican idency and its side, it's very hard to get things through," the civil rights Conyers said. t. With regards to the overall outcome of the ng to President- presidential election, he was equally upset. Cabinet, Conyers "In some ways it was stolen," Conyers said, most like a bad "but it was really taken." dug up." The Supreme Court's 5-4 decision to halt ving his speech, the Florida recount, he said, "will take its ot think much of place among Dred Scott and Plessv - all ffirmative action these things you have to come back and clean Rackham dean up." Conyers also decried the low turnout among blacks. "Why not have Election Day a holiday?"he asked. "Black males are voting at a national rate of 48 percent -- it's abysmal. A democ- ratic society can go under if less than 50 per- cent of the population is participating." Students in the audience said they felt encouraged by Conyers' visit. "The impact of him coming down shows what kind of support there is for the civil rights movement," said LSA sophomore Agnes Aleobua, one of the intervening defen- dants in the lawsuit and a member of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary. "We can have more students charter (a bus) here," said Doron Pratt, an Engineering sophomore at the University's Flint campus. But, he added, "Basically I feel we're sleeping on the issue at the University of Michigan." addresses' IAll aboard history of diversity at 'U' By James Restivo Daily Staff Reporter When Earl Lewis was teaching at the University of California at Berkeley in 1989, he had to decide whether to stay in sunny California or bear the cold for a chance to promote diversity at the University of Michigan. Lewis, now dean of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate, said he believed he had the ability to mobilize and recruit others in an effort to create a significant pres- ence of minorities. "I had to begin a job of bringing a diverse faculty together to engage in a way of transforming this soci- ety," Lewis said. "An institution has to have the leader- ship and resolve to engage in change for the benefit of a broader society." Lewis spoke to an audience numbering more than 150 yesterday as part of the MLK symposium in an effort to rec- ognize the history of diversity at the University. Matriculation began in 1817, the first African Ameri- can enrolled in 1868, the first woman in 1870 and the first Asian in 1872, which Lewis said shows the Univer- sity has "been anchored in a large history of remarkable change." Lewis talked about the past 100 years, pointing out the progress the University has made in admissions and diversity, citing that in the 1960s applicants had to send a picture for undergraduate consideration. He also talked about specific events that have recently shaped the student body, including the 1972 Equal Opportu- nity Act, removing discrimination in the workplace and the 1978 University of California Regents v. Bakke Supreme Court opinion, allowing race to be considered as a factor in admissions. "Students have played a tremendous role in the communi- ty we now see - they help to shape American social poli- cy," Lewis said. During the presentation, Lewis opened the floor for a dis- cussion of various issues. He addressed the concerns of some students regarding the diversity and responsiveness of University faculty. "An institution has to have the leadership and resolve to engage in change for the benefit of a broader society." - Earl Lewis Dean, Rackham Graduate School Engineering junior Carmela Barnes said the biggest problems she faces in her classes is the prototypical pro- fessors and a high minority drop-out rate. "They need more minority females," Barnes said. "'We need encouragement and mentorship. It might be ' ore helpful to receive this from someone you have some- thing in common with." Lawsuits challenging the University's use of race as a fac- tor in admissions provided another topic of the presentation. "The University has distinguished itself as a major public institution. We have the ability to show diversity and a high quality student body can exist," Lewis said. "Diversity and excellence are compatible." The lawsuit, Grutter v. Lee Bollinger et. al., which goes to trial today, deals with the constitutionality of taking race into consideration at the Law School, which Lewis said is necessary to ensure a diverse com- munity. "If we are going to look at a whole individual, we can't ignore a part of them as salient as their racial background," Lewis said. Aeronautics Minority Engineering Society founder Arthur Hutchinson, an Engineering senior, said the most important way to solve diversity problems is to ensure a good balance between students and suppolt networks. "The environment is influential on a student's success Hutchinson said. "We have a very diverse student body we just need a way to bring them all together' ELLIE WHITE/Daily Ann Arbor resident Colin Gardinier, 6, reads about black holes in the Artrain's NASA Art Program, "Artistry of Space," on Saturday. Town hlmeetin examines quality oflife for Latinosxi WANT TO WRITE FOR THE DAILY? COME TO A 1ASS MEETING TONIGHT AT 7 P.M. IN THE STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUILDING. N Latino actor Edward James Olmos attempts to raise awareness of Latino quality of life issues among students By Stephanie Schonholz For the Daily Like a battle cry from a war zone, Edward James Olmos said to a packed room of people from vari- ous facets of the Latino community, "We are everybody, Latinos in the United States, what do we do'? You name it, we've done everything." In addition to delivering an ener- getic keynote address yesterday, the Latino actor gave a forceful speech Sunday evening at the Latino Town Hall Conference, which was spon- sored by the student-run Latino Task Force. In an attempt to bring awareness to the quality of life for Latinos across the country, Olmos said that "we (Latinos) don't have a national voice as Latinos; I'm the closest thing to it." An advocate for the betterment of the Latino community for more than 30 years, Olmos said that the key to raising the status of Latinos in this country must begin with changes in the education system of the United States, starting with grammar and preschools. The relaxed atmosphere of the meeting allowed many audience members to express their opinions regarding the state of the Latino community at the University and the nation at large. Associate English Prof. Jonathan Sallas, in reference to the expand- ing Latino studies program, said, "the Latino studies program on campus is meant to be a resource to learn the origins, experiences, hopes and goals of the Latino com- munity." After Olmos' speech concluded with a standing ovation, the town hall format included a student-led discussion that enabled University Latino students to speak about the problems and solutions occurring right now on campus. LSA sophomore Galy Guzman said she is not satisfied with the status of Latinos at the University and the Latino student community is not as involved as it should be. "Keeping the passion for unity in our community" is one way in which J.J. Arevalo, an office assistant in University Undergraduate Admis- sions, said he feels that the Latino population can grow and become an even greater force on campus. Arevalo said he "would like to see Latinos in a variety of leader- ship roles" in order to branch out in the student groups at the University. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS Generation APA Sublist meeting, ing, 6:30 p.m., MSA Chambers, 3909 Mi chigan Union, rbreakst@umich.edu "Ge~ndr and Representatin lin Coto- Department, 7:00 p.m., Michigan League Henderson Room CE Duir ie E1 I s Im