LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 20, 2003 - 3A Coleman requests smaller budget cuts Police investigate possible criminal sexual assault A woman called police from Mosher Jordan Residence Hall Monday morn- ing to report that she had been sexually assaulted by an acquaintance on Friday. Department of Public Safety Lt. Crys- tal James said both the victim and the suspect are affiliated with the Universi- ty, and that DPS does not suspect alco- hol or drugs to be involved. James added that because the case is still under investigation, DPS could not provide further information about the assault. Officers said it is unknown whether any arrests will be made. Second-and third-degree criminal sexual conduct is punishable by up to 15 years in jail. Suspects convicted of first-degree sexual assault can face life imprisonment. Vehicle stolen from Glazier Avenue lot remains missing DPS reports state that a dark green 1998 Ford Ranger was stolen from a University parking lot on Glazier Avenue sometime Tuesday. DPS has no suspects, and the vehicle had not been recovered as of last night. Police apprehend pot, paraphernalia from trio in MoJo Three females in Mosher Jordan Resi- dence Hall were questioned Tuesday night after DPS officers suspected them of possessing a controlled substance. Police collected marijuana and other paraphernalia from the suspects, who were released pending warrant authori- zation. Light falls from museum ceiling, injures passerby A man was reportedly injured Mon- day morning when a light fixture fell from the ceiling of the Ruthven Muse- um. The man called DPS but declined an ambulance, reports state. Officers contacted the University Electric Shop to make the repairs. Cell phone left unattended stolen from 'U' building A cell phone that was allegedly taken from the Central Campus Recre- ational Building on March 10 was reported stolen a week later. The caller said he had left his cell phone unat- tended in the building. Solicitors selling cologne escorted from Couzens hall A man and a woman selling cologne on the fifth floor of Couzens Resi- dence Hall were escorted from the building after residents complained to DPS officers about the solicitation Monday afternoon. DPS reports did not state how long the solicitors had been present in the building. Man given MIP, taken to hospital after passing out A 19-year-old man was taken to the hospital Monday night after being dis- covered unconscious in Couzens Resi- dence Hall. The man was later cited for possessing alcohol, DPS reports state. Police respond to multiple reports of skaters, cyclists Unseasonably warm weather on St. Patrick's Day led to several calls made to DPS regarding skateboarders, rollerbladers and bike riders failing to comply with city ordinances. The first call occurred at 5:30 p.m., when a person complained that several subjects were skateboarding on a handrail between Glen Street and the Taubman Medical Center. DPS respond- ed to a second call at 6:15 p.m., when a caller from the Medical Science Unit II building on Catherine Street reported that a group of juveniles were skating near the building. A third call was placed from the Horace Rackham Graduate Studies building on Washington Street at 8 p.m., when a group of cyclists were discovered riding their bikes on the front steps of the building. Police were not able to locate any of the suspects. Pedestrian light By Dan Trudeau Daily Staff Reporter "A significant reduction of our state appro- priation will lead to an adverse effect on the education of our students," University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman said yesterday in Lansing. At the Michigan State Capitol testifying before the House Higher Education Appropri- ations Subcommittee, Coleman and the presi- dents of four other public universities asked the committee members to soften the budget cuts to higher education proposed by Gov. Jennifer Granholm earlier this month. Under Granholm's proposal, the University will suffer a $23.4 million decrease in fund- ing. Should the Legislature approve the meas- ure, the cut would have strong negative effects on the state's economic prospects, Coleman said. "The lifetime economic benefits of educa- tion are well understood by our students, who seek to join us in record numbers," Coleman said. "It is true that we depend on our appropriation from the state - but at the University of Michigan, we give back far more to the state than we receive in our appropriation." Coleman noted the University has made many important state contributions, including the cre- ation of new economic opportunities through $456 million in federal revenue to Michigan for research last year. Rep. Chris Kolb (D-Ann Arbor), a mem- ber of the subcommittee, said Coleman's remarks were helpful in creating a dialogue about the importance of higher education as an economic development resource for the state. He added that while the future of statewide universities' funding is uncertain, there is support for higher education within the house. "There's a vocal minority who are looking to see what can be done to help the universi- ties. Where that effort goes from here - I'm not sure," Kolb said. "We need to start look- ing at the long-term impact of our decisions. (The universities) can weather a one-year cut, but we cannot support a long-term reduction in the quality of our higher education." Coleman also affirmed the University's com- mitment to provide sufficient financial aid resources for students in need and to keep tuition from increasing too dramatically. "We have kept tuition increases as low as possible over the past several years, espe- cially in comparison to our Big Ten counter- parts." "In this state, the University of Michigan and Michigan State University have been leaders in tuition restraint," Coleman said. Provost Paul Courant said while there is no legal limitation to the amount by which the Uni- versity can raise tuition, the University Board of Regents will not rely solely on tuition increases to cover the cuts to state funding and rising costs in utility, medical care, security systems and other expenses. "It is true that we depend on our appropriation from the state - but at the University of Michigan, we give far more back to the state than we receive in our appropriation:' - Mary Sue Coleman University president "There is no possible way that tuition increases could be large enough to cover the cuts and the $50 million in new costs for next year," Courant said. "We will certainly be taking expenditures out of the budget." The Michigan legislature is expected to make its final decisions on the governor's proposals in June. Up and Down Bakke decision scrutinized in CIR's undergraduate brief By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter Although they make up only a fraction of the 150 points in the University admissions selection index, the 20 points received for race comes under attack in the Cen- ter for Individual Right's brief in Gratz v. Bollinger. . CIR will present its oral arguments in thew case, challenging they University's undergrad- uate admissions poli- cies, before the U.S. , Supreme Court April 1.w "The automatic Prthe award of a fixed pref- pour-pe erence to every mem- ber of a specified racial or ethnic e not heavily weighted, especially considering the fact that an appli- cant's academic credentials com- prise 110 points. "There's no way that 20 out of 150 is the overwhelming factor," Alger said. "The Supreme Court is unlikely to fix in on a particular number." The legacy of the 1978 Bakke decision remains at stake as the trial approaches. The plaintiffs repeatedly claim that the University misinterprets Powell's opinion, speaking for the "Ymajority of the court, that race can be used as a one of many factors in ,Ie, deciding admissions. CIR questions the mean- ing of Powell's statement that race could be meant as a factor. "I think that universities have attempt- ed to distort the meaning of Bakke," CIR spokesman Curt Levey said. But Alger added that the University modeled its admissions system after that used by Harvard University where race could be used as a plus factor, as pro- posed by Powell. "I think it's important to point out that Bakke did actually spec- ify guidance," Alger said. "It's possible that they could decide to clarify Bakke." The brief also emphasizes that diver- sity is a vague principle and cannot be narrowly and properly defined in col- lege admissions systems. "To justify the use of race and ethnicity as considerations in admissions on the basis that diversi- ty is a compelling interest would be to make a substantial and dramatic break from this Court's articulated equal-protection principles. It would infringe on fundamental rights protected by the Fourteenth Amendment and the other civil rights statutes at issue here," the brief states. The plaintiffs use the minority opin- ion from the Bakke decision to help their cause, showing that there is no differ- ence between quotas and the addition of points in the selection index. "There is no sensible, and certainly no constitutional, distinction between, for example, adding a set number of points to the admission rating of disadvantaged minority applicants as an expression of the preference with the expectation that this will result in the admission of an approximately determined number of qualified minority applicants and setting a fixed number of places for such appli- cants as was done (at Davis)," Justice William Brennan wrote in Bakke. group is nothing like what Justice (Lewis) Powell approved in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke," the brief states. "Indeed, he rejected the systematic award of preferences, based solely on race or ethnicity, that the University's pref- erences entail. Justice Powell voted to strike down the quota system under consideration in Bakke." But University Assistant G al Counsel Jonathan Alger se y ce DAVID KATZIDaily LSA junior Ryan Bari of Alpha Gamma Delta continues the 36-hour teeter-totter marathon for diabetes research in the Diag yesterday. Student apathy, mud- slingng contribute to low voter turnout By Andrew Kaplan Daily Staff Reporter Although voter turnout for the Michi- gan Student Assembly fell last year - nearly 1,000 fewer students voted in the 2002 fall elections than in the 2001 fall elections - the rate of undergraduate turnout has stayed steady at about 20 percent since 1998. Some students said candidates' inabili- ties to acquaint themselves with their constituents has led to a sense of apathy toward student government. "Especially because the campus is so large, it's hard to encompass all students and all their views," LSA junior Uzoma Anyanetu said. While most candidates in today's student government elections have channeled their energies into cam- paigning, a core of party members has also spent its time trading barbs over a contentious e-mail.Since campaigns began three weeks ago, an anonymous source has circulated e-mails to stu- dents accusing Adam Haba, a Univer- sity Party candidate for MSA from the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, of racist remarks in a February 2002 e-mail he sent to African Ameri- can Cultural Show organizer Canethia Henderson. Haba sent the e-mail in response to Henderson's invitation ask- ing him to attend the cultural show. Responding to Henderson, Haba said he would not "sit through an hour of 'I hate whitey' racial slurs, in your 'Nazi- esque' attempt to convince me that I am the cause of your oppression, for the sole reason that I am white." Haba also added in the e-mail that he is "all for equality and an end to dis- crimination," but that the cultural show disseminated propaganda. "If you read through the e-mail, nowhere does it state that I am racist - that I hate anybody different from myself," Haba said. "Any rumors going around about me are completely untrue. I truly believe in a colorblind society." While Haba admitted that his remarks who it is and I don't know how he got that information," she said. "I think (Haba's e-mail) might have been taken out of context and I think that needs to be considered." Reflecting on a relatively low voter turnout in student government elections at the University, several students said MSA representatives do not serve stu- dents' interests. "Students think MSA is a waste of time," Rackham student Eric Miller said. "I don't think MSA does anything useful." "Students feel (student government) is just self-serving, resume-stuffing posi- tions," Anyanetu said, adding that she approves of MSA resolutions advocat- ing campus improvements. "If (resolu- tions) are in the University, it's fine, but with Iraq it's a waste of time." "Bush doesn't care what we think," she said, citing an MSA resolution dis- couraging war with Iraq. But students said when MSA can ful- fill their purpose as campus leaders by passing resolutions that seek to improve University life. "One thing that sticks out is the trans- portation service to the airport," Rack- ham student Mohammad Khalil said, referring to the MSA airBus that offers rides to Detroit Metro Airport during Spring Break. Khalil -- who is coordinator of the Muslim Graduate Students Association - added that MSA was quick to fund his student group. "It's the little things like that - it just makes the process more convenient," he said. "They've always been quicker than they tell me (at providing funds)." In addition, the assembly's troubles are not unique among student governments of other Big Ten universities. "In terms of voter turnout, 17.5 percent of under- grads voted last year," said Allison Young, Undergraduate Student Govern- ment chief of staff at Pennsylvania State University. "I would say feelings are mixed about the role of the USG." Rasha Aly, a reporter at the -Lantern at Ohio State University, said sentiment