NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 7, 2004 - 3 ON CAMPUS New club for black educators to meet for first time The recently formed club Black Edu- cators of Tomorrow will hold their first informational meeting today from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the Whitney Room of the School of Education. The club's focus is to sustain a black presence in University education. It will also provide support for blacks pursuing admittance to the school and those who are interested in the future of education. Researcher to speak about Great Lakes' currents David Schwab of the Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis- tration, will discuss the progress of research on the subject of Great Lakes' currents has gone since the drifting bottles of Mike Harrington in 1894. The event is today at 2:15 p.m. in the Detroit Observatory Library and Schwab will present background on Harrington's work and discuss modern measurement techniques. Seating is limited to40 people. Prof to lecture on spinal cord injuries Ronald Triolo, an assistant profes- sor of orthopedics and biomechanical engineering at Case Western Reserve University, will give a lecture titled Functional Electrical Stimulation For Standing in Spinal Cord Injury. The talk will take place today from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in room F2305 in the Maternal Child Health Center. CRIME NOTES Walker spars with driver after car accident A pedestrian reported to the Depart- ment of Public Safety that he was assaulted after a traffic altercation with a driver on Saturday afternoon on East Medical Center Drive. Computer swiped from grad library A caller reported to DPS that his lap- top computer was stolen from the Har- lan Hatcher Graduate Library on Friday. There are no suspects. Trespasser taken to hospital Police picked up a non-University affiliate loitering in the billiards and games room of the Michigan Union Sun- day night. Later, the nonaffiliate went to the University Hospital. After being treated, the person refused to leave. Police arrested the individual for disor- derly conduct and trespassing. THIS DAY In Daily History Heart transplant patient receives mechanical heart Dec. 7, 1984 - A six-month-old heart transplant patient was kept alive by a mechanical heart and lung for three days after her surgery at the Uni- versity Hospital. Laura was the first patient to successfully have a trans- planted heart that is also supported by a mechanical heart, said the inventor of the device and medical school Prof. Robert Bartlett. "This is historic because it demon- strates that we now have back-up for a transplanted heart during difficult periods, much the way dialysis is some- times used to support kidney patients," Bartlett wrote in a statement. Doctors put Laura on the mechanical heart and lung after her heart surgery because her new heart was having diffi- culty pumping blood through her lungs. CORRECTIONS A brief in Thursday's Daily should have said an Ann Arbor medical helicopter crashed into a housing complex in 1994. The brief also should have cited Joan Rose as spokeswoman for St. Joseph's hospital. Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily. com. Int' Istudent enrollment drops nationwide By Jeremy Davidson Daily Staff Reporter For the first time in more than 30 years, enrollment of international stu- dents in the United States has dropped, the Institute of International Educa- tion's Open Doors survey reported last month. The University lost only 17 international students last year but ranked seventh among about 2,700 U.S. institutions in international stu- dent enrollment with a total of 4,584 foreign students. Last year, international student enrollment fell from a national total of 586,323 students in the 2002-03 academic year to 572,509, a decrease of 2.4 percent, according to the Open Doors survey. The University offset last year's small decrease in international stu- dent enrollment with an increase of 50 students this semester. The Univer- sity has historically been a leader in international student enrollment, said International Center Director Rodolfo Altamirano. "There are many reasons why U of M is still on top," Altamirano said. "U of M has a world-class reputation of excellence through generations." Other reasons he listed included a sprawling alumni network and world- renowned professors. International student Prateek Chourdia agreed that the reputation of the University's business and engi- neering schools was a major factor in his decision to enroll. "(The engineering school's) faculty, infrastructure and location ... have a world-wide reputation," said Chour- dia, an Engineering freshman from Singapore. and the resources available to them at the University, as well as engaging in political advocacy for the students. Though the University has been rel- atively successful in attracting foreign students, post-Sept. 11 regulations have depressed international student enrollment nationwide. "It has been very difficult for our international students to come to study in the U.S. When I came to study as an international student 21 years ago, I had to deal with a strict policy, but there is no comparison to what international students are facing right now," Altamirano said. He pointed to a visa applica- tion process that can take months to complete, security checks at ports of entry and a $100 fee imposed by the Department of Homeland Security as examples of more stringent regula- tions. The department also maintains an electronic database that tracks for- eign students. "Applying to a university in the U.S. as an international student is quite a complicated routine. First you must research the university and gather information about it. Then you have to get the university to send you course packs," Chourdia said. "A lot of the ... information is mailed to international students at the same time it is sent to students in the U.S. However, the information takes more time to reach international students, which causes them to miss deadlines and pay late fees." LSA sophomore Sikander Ahmed agreed with Chourdia that the appli- cation process for foreign students is time-consuming. "It took a lot of time for everything to get processed," said Ahmed, an international student from Pakistan. "The application process for the U.K. was much easier. It didn't take as much time or require as much paperwork." Altamirano said the visa applica- tion process has become so difficult that it has acted as a major deterrent to international students applying to study in the United States. "If action isn't taken, we could lose our international students to other countries," Altamirano said, adding that Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, France and Ger- many are all proactive in recruiting international students. "If it's too difficult to come to the U.S., they might head to where they feel more welcome," he said. Chourdia attributed the difficulties of the process to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. "The visa application process in England was less stringent because they didn't suffer terrorist attacks. The U.S. immigration process has been extremely strict. There are quotas for international students and internation- al workers, which have been shrink- ing more and more over the last four years," Chourdia said. Altamirano said international stu- dents can help improve foreign rela- tions. "I think it's very critical that we welcome international students as a part of this university and country," he said. "It is important for them to see past the image of the 'ugly Ameri- can.' If they have a positive, enlight- ening experience here, then when they go back they will be our unofficial ambassadors and will have a positive voice for the United States." Rodolfo Altamirano, director of the International Center, sits in his office yes- terday. The University's appeal is not only a product of its academic reputation, but also of the support the University provides to make international stu- dents feel comfortable in unfamiliar surroundings, Altamirano said. "I have always had an open-door policy where students can come in and share their perspectives, ideas, give suggestions, open their hearts or just talk about their lives as students. We want to make the International Center their home away from home," Altami- rano said. The International Center informs students about national regulations Detroit school district loses thousands of students Charter schools, schools of choice draw more than half of 9,300 students who left DETROIT (AP) - Charter schools and schools of choice account for about half of the 9,300 student loss in the Detroit School District this year. Charter schools gained 3,400 Detroit students this year, while schools of choice in neighboring districts gained 1,300. Enrollment in the Detroit district dropped 6 percent this year, from 150,000 to 140,700. "The problem is people don't have confidence in our schools," said former Detroit schools Superintendent John Porter. "We have to deal with it" This year, 33,983 Detroit children are enrolled COSTS Continued from page 1 takers who would not be able to take the test without the financial help. In addi- tion to assistance programs, many uni- versities waive application fees for high standardized-test scores. Preparation classes for these stan- dardized tests are not cheap. Test prepa- ration centers like Kaplan, Princeton and other online programs offer basic packages from about $499 to $4,000 for personal tutoring packages. For the University, Rackham oversees the graduate school applications. The cost to apply is $60 for U.S citizens and $75 for non-U.S. citizens - who make up more than half of Rackham'sh20,000 applications yearly. Despite the money that is generated from these applications, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson says it is not nearly enough to cover the expenses the University itself faces. "The fee partially compensates the University for processing the applica- tions but certainly does not cover the entire cost," Peterson said. TRANSCRIPT Continued from page 1 bia's faculty before becoming director of the University's academic career center. But plenty of negative comments were heard from some faculty members last night, especially that this effort may make high-performing students' grades seem less impressive than they are. "I think if there's the potential for misinterpretation that is a negative," said Robert Pachella, professor of psy- chology and a member of the curricu- lum committee said. Pachella proposed an amendment and argued that the proposal should only affect classes with 20 or more students, saving more rigorous seminars from the new grade listing. Pachella's amend- ment was defeated, possibly because the higher standard would have excluded too many LSA students. The other proposal the LSA faculty approved is that the "W" that appears on a transcript after a student with- draws from a class after the drop/add deadline will be excluded for first- semester students. The impetus for such a change was to help new students who were staying in a class that was hurting them, but were too afraid to drop it because they feared a"W" on their transcripts, Megginson said. The drop/add date would not change, only the mark on a transcript. Students still would not be able to join classes after the deadline. Both proposals will be detailed dur- ing implementation discussions that will include members of the faculty, the curriculum committee and LSA Student Government. If any of the decisions are cannot to be made during these discussions, they will come back - to LSA faculty. in charter schools, up 3,407 from 30,576 last year, The Detroit News said yesterday. About 30 suburban districts in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties accept Detroit students. This year, they have 6,530 Detroit students, up 1,293 from 5,237 last year. Michigan guarantees $6,700 per student to state school districts, and the Detroit School Dis- trict's enrollment drop means a loss of about $62 million. The district recently reported a $48 million defi- cit for last school year and a $150 million deficit for the current one. The district is looking to get legislative approval to sell bonds to prevent it from cutting up to 4,000 jobs and closing schools tobal- ance its budget. Detroit school officials are not the only ones worried about the problems in the district; leaders in neighboring districts say they must fend off a steady stream of Detroit parents illegally enrolling their children in suburban schools. In Ferndale, police charged a Detroit mother with two felonies on accusations of lying about where she lived to get her daughter into Ferndale High School. About 750 Detroit children are legiti- mately enrolled in the district. Southfield schools are aggressively rooting out nonresidents trying to enroll in the district, said spokesman Ken Siver. He said about 70 students, most from Detroit, have been dropped this year because of residency fraud. Majority-Republicans in the state Legislature are asking fora review of the Detroit schools' financial troubles. Republican Senate Majority Leader Ken Sikke- ma of Wyoming agreed last week to delay by one week introducing a resolution that could eventually lead to the appointment of a manager to oversee the school district's finances. "What happens in Detroit affects us all," said Dearborn schools Superintendent John Artis. "A disaster on our borders ... puts us at harm." Thk I Inivrci, f Tnltinr[ Cllrua of I1 si IN-STATE Considering Law School TUITION FOR 6 MICHIGAN Open Law Forum tor All Unlerrad Degrees COUNTIES * Discuss opportunities in la . Meet UT Law Professors a w nd .Hillsdale eLenawee Mon roe .Oa kiand *Washtenaw .Wayne current UT Law Students. " Invite Your parents, partners, spouses and friendstobe L our guests. UNVER$SITY OF T OLE D0 LA\/veTuesday, December 28, 2004 M E T Y U B sT Burton Manor, 27777SchoolCraft Rd., Livonia, MI 10 a.m.to 12noon. Continental Breakfast . Highly rated by US News & World Report . #1 in Michigan Bar Exam performance 2003-04 . $1.5 million in scholarships awarded annually . Beautiful suburban campus APPLY ON-LINE FOR FREE or F RF Wednesday, December 29,2004 Jewish Community Center, 660 W. Maple Rd. West Bloomfield, Mi 6 to 8 pm. Hors d'oeuvres RSVP call: 419-530-4131 Email: law.admissions@utoledo.edu Website: www.utlaw.edu