Friday, April 16, 2004 Opinion 4 Sports 8 Shabina Khatri gets her final hurrah Michigan faces coaching legend Hell hath no fury like an Uma scorned in 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' ... Arts, Page 9 il rleli fq" tc t 43ai Weather News 12 University student speaks from Iraq One-hundred-thirteen years of editorialfreedom TOMORROW: ©2004 The Michigan Daily wwwmichgaindaidy.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 136 .Plymouth Road medians proposed Plan offered to City Council would install traffic medians on busy street near spot where two students killed By Mona Rafeeq Daily Staff Reporter Five months after two University students were killed at a busy intersection on Plymouth Road, the city is taking action to increase safety measures in that area. Officials from the city Engineering Department have outlined a proposal to the Ann Arbor City Council that would install traffic precautions on Ply- mouth Road. The plan suggests installing grass medians run- ning down the middle of Plymouth from Murfin Avenue to Nixon Road, a span of about seven and a half miles, as well as the possibility of a traffic light at the intersection of Plymouth and Traverwood Drive, pending a survey. The council has not yet voted on the plan, and it is unknown when they plan to do so. The section of the road discussed in this plan prompted intense scrutiny in November after engineering students Teh Nannie Roshem Roslan and Norhananim Zainol were killed by a vehicle while crossing Plymouth on their way home from attending an evening prayer at the Islamic Center of Ann Arbor. City Councilmember Jean Carlberg said she likes the idea of the traffic medians because they allow pedestrians to wait in the median to check for traf- fic before crossing the next two lanes safely to the other side. "The traffic medians provide refuge for pedestri- ans crossing the street and are also aesthetically pleasing," Carlberg said. The department's immediate plans call for con- structing 12-foot-wide traffic medians in the center lane of the five-lane Plymouth Road. Chief Engineer Homayoon Pirooz said the medians would cost a total of $120,000 to $130,000. Pirooz said the department proposed the plan to the City Council as "a traffic-calming method." "There are also medians now within the limit that are not used. We thought it would not only be safer if the asphalt medians were converted to grass, but it would look better too," he said. Lighted pedestrian crosswalks and a reduction of speed limit from 40 to 35 miles per hour would also See TRAFFIC, Page 10 Budget to lead to tough choices " over summer The world at his hands By Donn M. Fresard and Alison Go Daily Staff Reporters Faced with a looming $20 million budget deficit predicted for the next fiscal year, the University has been taking strides to avert a budgetary cri- sis without significantly raising tuition. Last month, University President Mary Sue Coleman announced that she planned to accept Gov. Jennifer Granholm's proposal that would keep tuition increases at 2.4 percent in exchange for a reduction in state cuts from 8 to 2 percent. Tuition for undergraduate state residents is $7,895 a year. Assuming a 2.4 percent or less increase, tuition next year will be $8,084. - the low- est tuition increase in at least 15 years. While the drop in state appropriations last year was offset by a 6.5 percent tuition increase, the expected 2.4 per- cent tuition hike will not make up for next year's projected budget deficit caused by the substantial cut in funding from the state. "Thirty years ago, the state provided 70 percent of the funding for instruc- tion at our Ann Arbor campus," Cole- man said. "Today, we receive less than 30 percent of our instructional funding from the state. The burden of the cost of education has dramatically shifted from state support to student tuition." Despite these cuts, last year's tuition increase was the lowest among Michi- gan public universities. Overall tuition rate growth over the last five years has also been the lowest in the state. In order to balance the budget, Cole- man said the University would be forced to reduce spending. "We're looking at every nook and cranny of the University to see what we can do without and how we can save money," she said. Although the severity of the budget deficit will require the University to make cuts in virtually every depart- ment, Coleman said academic depart- ments will be relatively safe, while administrative areas will bear the brunt of the budget shortfall. In the past year, Coleman said the University has eliminated more than 300 administrative positions, reduced its travel budget, overhauled its pre- scription drug plan and reduced utility costs. Beginning in 2005, the Universi- ty's health bene- fits plan will also be restructured, which Coleman said will further increase savings. To compensate for rising tuition * s costs, Coleman said the Universi- ty has taken steps to ensure that stu- dents are still able to pay for their education, consis- tently offsetting tuition hikes with equal or greater increases in centrally budgeted finan- cial aid. This year there was an increase of 8.3 percent in financial aid, compared to the 6.5 percent raise in tuition. The University also raises large amounts of money through private donations and endowments that go toward financial aid. "Private fundraising is always important because without that kind of fundraising, we just can't generate enough money from the state and tuition alone," Coleman said. The University will kick off a new capital campaign on May 14 to raise money for scholarships, fellowships and endowed professorships from pri- vate donors, Coleman said. Coleman predicted this will be the largest such campaign in the Universi- See BUDGET, Page 10 JEFF LEHNERT/Daily Rackham student Christopher Landau collaborates with Engineering students to make his group's mechanical sculpture at a Mechanical Engineering Seminar In the Media Union on North Campus yesterday. Stu ents w1 receive bills in e-mal By Ashley Dinges Daily Staff Reporter The University will cut down on its use of paper beginning this fall. In an e-mail sent to all students late Wednesday night, the University's Office of Stu- dent Financial Operations announced that beginning in June, billing statements will be sent to students electronically via e-mail. Jim Middlemas, University cashier and assistant manager of Financial Operations, said the changes were put in place for various reasons, including requests from parents after their students began e- mailing them the bills. "Basically, we want to get the bills out to you folks as soon as possible and give you the possibility of picking it up at your leisure. Let's face it, the world is going electronic, and being able to pull up the bill anywhere in the world is amazing," Middlemas said. The University will send out both paper and elec- tronic notifications for the spring and summer terms, but will switch solely to electronic billing in Septem- ber. Since December 2002, students have been able to pay bills electronically through Wolverine Access. The new changes only affect the actual billing statement. "We generate a paper bill currently. Students, for one reason or the other, tend to not keep them, lose them or misplace them," Middlemas said. He added that the change should be relatively easy for students to handle, because they only need to specify who receives the statement. "Basically the students don't have to do anything, except we will have the ability to let students sign up a guest to receive an e-mail and receive access to the bill. They're going to have to name the individual and direct them to sign up for it" Middlemas said. But students will not have to worry about a guest having access to their Wolverine Access account. The billing statements will be kept on a separate server, and guests will not have access to anything except the statement. Individuals whom the student chooses to access their statement will not use a University-issued uniq- name and will have to use a separate system, and "The bills will be residing on a secure server. Stu- See BILLING, Page 10 ECONOMY Survey: A2 businesses face high costs Research symposium marks end of Brown theme semester By Jonathan Cohen For the Daily Maria Thompson, chief executive officer of TJ Technologies Inc., is one of many city business owners who said she had trouble starting up her enterprise in Ann Arbor a few years ago. Thomp- son said the city should be more aware and con- ducive to small businesses. Owners like Thompson and Scott Leopold of Leopold Brothers Brewery said they felt neglect- ed by the city early on in their careers. They, along with other established and new business owners across the city, expressed concern with +-p rent hnrcinu andr narking in a -urvv cn.. "This is an expensive place to maintain a busi- ness. You have to work hard through the many city policies and regulations," he said. He said the rent he pays is not as high as that of businesses located on State Street, which he said have to pay $10,000 or more per month. Telemaco added that the city denied him approval to change the sign outside his door because the area on East William Street is consid- ered a historical district. College Shoe Repair owner Pat Brown has been in town 60 years longer than Telemaco and has similar concerns. College Shoe Repair is next door to NYPD. "It's a1most imnossible to keen aoin2. It is Costs of business Local business owners express strengths and weakness of A2 business environment Out of about 180 owners surveyed, 44 per- cent responded that taxes and costs of busi- ness in city were too high. Ten percent said they believed a lack of parking in the city hurt business. Twenty-three percent credited proximity to By Lindsey Paterson Daily Staff Reporter LSA senior Lindsey Petersen said growing up in northern Michigan, she always had a negative image of Detroit. Her perspective changed this term when she traveled to Detroit with her Psychology 317 class to work with children at Latino sity's Brown v. Board of Education 50th Anniversary Commemoration theme semester. Student research projects illuminat- ed the impact of the Brown case on Detroit schools, Hispanic and Asian American communities and other areas of education such as tutoring inner-city children. "The main purpose of (the sympo- i i i r