Thursday, October 27, 2005 News 3A 'U' underage drinking policies criticized at MSA forum Opinion 4A Sports SA Eric Jackson wantsyou to take a statistics course John Thompson has made a name for himself n-h TAL. ded OF IIfTLeny r...1 P-f STATEMENT One-Izundredfifteen years of ediooriilfreedorn , , "' ''HIM - ------- - I : I :I I I : a I U, --- -- - - --- ------------ --- ---------------------- - www.mzch/igandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 19 @2005 The Michigan Daily O 'U,' overshoots enrollment targets again NOAH- ~KRN/Daily LSA freshman Kenneth Human of New Orleans looks at photos, e-malled to him from his family, of his house after Hurricane Katrina's aftermath. Katrina student fights for aid Minority enrollment up this year; black enrollment reaches pre-Supreme Court levels By Anne VanderMey Daily Staff Reporter For the second year in a row, the Uni- versity has exceeded its freshman enroll- ment goal by hundreds of students. At 6,115 students, this year's freshman class is the largest in University history, breaking last year's record. Admissions officers overshot their tar- get enrollment by 755 students. The high numbers are the result of more students than expected accepting their admissions offers. According to Ted Spencer, director of undergraduate admissions, yield rates - the proportion of students who decide on the University after receiving acceptance letters -havebeen outpacingsadmissions officers' predictions for the past two years. Administrators said the increase is indica- tive of the University's strong international reputation. "The growth in our enrollment is a reflec- tion of academic strength, and we're grati- fied that students continue to see Michigan as one of their top choices," interim Provost Ned Gramlich said in a written statement. This year also saw record numbers of minority students enrolled as freshman, despite the 2003 U.S. Supreme Court rul- ing in Grutter v. Bollinger, which struck down the University's policy of awarding points on the basis of race as unconstitu- tional. While the Court found the point sys- tem to be a crude method of admission, it did not prohibit admissions officers from using race as a factor, as long as the process for admitting students was a holistic one. The freshman class contains an unprece- dented number of both Hispanic and Asian students, and although freshman enrollment numbers for black students are not at an all- time high, they are roughly equal to pre- The numbers are in University enrollment results for this year's freshman class: This year's total freshman enroll- ment is 6,115 students - the largest freshman class ever, break- ing last year's record of 6,040 students. The freshman class includes 443 black students - 21 percent higher than last year's number, and exactly the same as the figure in 2002. The number, of Hispanic freshmen is 312, an all-time high for the University. More than $1 million in tuition grants given by University to students By Christina Hildreth Daily Staff Reporter It's the end of October, and while most University students are finish- ing midterms and finding housing for next year, LSA freshman Ken- neth Human is still sorting through paperwork and trying to get his life back in order. Human caught the last flight out of Louisiana before Hurri- cane Katrina hit, arriving at the Uni- versity just days after his mother's home in New Orleans was destroyed by floods when Lake Pontchartrain breached the city's levees. So far, the University has dispersed more than $1 million in financial aid for this semester to more than 70 stu- dents whose families were affected by the catastrophe. The University has been "sincere and generous in its offers of assistance to students affected by the hurricane,"University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. But some students say they are fall- ing through administrative cracks. "It's very distracting," Human said on his difficulties in receiving more financial aid from the University. "Its hard to focus (on midterms) if you don't know if you're going to be able to stay at the (University)," he added. In September, University officials promised free fall-semester tuition for newly admitted hurricane stu- dents. Financial aid administrators encouraged previously admitted stu- dents from southern Mississippi and Louisiana to apply for additional aid as well. Yet the process has not been per- fect. "This situation was unprec- edented and required all sorts of exceptions to our normal processes and policies," Peterson said. For example, Human's parents asked the Office of Financial Aid to review his aid package. All was run- ning smoothly until Human received an e-mail saying he was behind on his tuition payments and would be denied University resources if he did not pay his bill. Although he only qualified for $2,600 in aid before the hurricane hit, and his parents did not lose their jobs because of the storm, most of his family's dispensable income is cur- rently being used for rebuilding their homes, leaving them unable to pay his school expenses. . When he called the Office of Financial Aid about the e-mail, he said he was told to meet with OFA See KATRINA, Page 7A Grutter levels. While freshman enrollment for black students is up, the overall black population at the University has decreased by 38 students since last year. John Matlock, associate director of admissions, said he attributes rising enroll- ment to intensive recruitment efforts on the part of the admissions team. He said the University has aggressively targeted minorities, citing University President Mary Sue Coleman's recruitment visits to several black churches. "What you see is the fruit of all of that work, as well as Michigan just continuing to be a very popular place that students want to go to," Matlock said. "We have a commitment to diversity across the board, ... racial and ethnic diversity, as well as diversity from students all over the country and all over the world." The intensive recruiting drive was spurred by the drop in minority enrollment after the Supreme Court ruling in 2003. See FRESHMEN, Page 5A . Students angry about $25 tickets for parking on street Summer parking ordinance goes into effect, limiting parking spots for nearby sorority and fraternity members By Jeremy Davidson Daily Staff Reporter When classes got out last April, many students felt parking in Ann Arbor was a serious problem. This fall, it seems to have gotten worse. The City of Ann Arbor has begun issuing $25 parking tick- ets to cars without residential permits parked on the streets in North Burns Park, and next month it plans to enforce the same rules in the Oxbridge neighborhood, a measure that has hit many students who are used to parking in the neighbor- hoods. Last May, Ann Arbor residents living in the two neighbor- hoods petitioned the city for changes in residential parking. They requested that all parking spots in the two neighbor- hoods become two-hour parking from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon- day through Sunday, except for residents with city-issued permits. City Council approved the restrictions at their meeting on July 25, despite vehement opposition from Michigan Student Assembly officials and members of nearby fraternities, who urged the Council to wait until students were back in town to voice their opinions on the issue. LSA junior Stuart Wag- ner, a former MSA representative, symbolically presented the Council with ear-plugs, because he said he felt they were not listening to the opinions of student-elected representatives. At the following City Council meeting, student leaders from MSA and the LSA Student Government urged the coun- cil to amend the resolution to allow residents of group houses in the area, such as fraternity or sorority houses, to apply for 12 passes instead of eight, and for residents to be allowed to apply for six passes instead of four. Under the current restric- tions, residents of group houses in the area can only apply for eight parking passes, and residential houses can only apply for four. The Council did not amend the resolution to accom- "This ordinance is inherently anti-student. (We) made this perfectly clear to the City Council during the summer." ~Jesse Levine MSA president modate this request. Councilman Leigh Greden (D-Ward 3) said the changes were intended to control commuter traffic in the area. "The number-one reason (to implement the program) was to remove cars from commuters who were parking there for free and then walking to work - people who did not live in the area. In fact, those are the people who have complained the most about (the parking ordinance)," Greden said. Student leaders and members of fraternities in affected areas disagreed. "This ordinance is inherently anti-student," MSA President Jesse Levine said. "I along with members of MSA made this perfectly clear to the City Council during the summer." Many members of the Greek system said they are upset with the new ordinances. "I think it's ridiculous because there's nowhere else to park," said Alex Feldman, outgoing president of the Sigma Nu fraternity. "People are already getting a lot of tickets as it is. I think this is a move by the city to make more money off See TICKETS, Page 5A 'U' profs sound off on affirmative action Michigan Civil Rights Initiative debated at panel discussion By Michael Kan Daily News Editor Two men unfolded two very different stories on affirmative action last night. Philosophy Prof. Carl Cohen, who began teaching at the University five decades ago, approached the podium outfitted in a cardigan public sphere." "Of course he was dead right," Cohen said. "He was dead right in 1954. ... And he's dead right today." The message, according to Cohen: Students should abolish affirmative action to promote a society based on equality. Marvin Krislov, the University's general counsel, couldn't disagree more. A member of the University's legal team in the 2003 Supreme Court affirmative action cases, Krislov pleaded with audience members to look at the present and face reality: Despite efforts to sow the seeds of equality, poverty and Author: Schools remain segregated By C.C. Song Daily Staff Reporter Half a century after the U.S. Supreme Court mandated the desegre- gation of public schools, the American school system has not become more integrated but is getting worse, civil rights activist and author Jonathan Kozol said last night. Kozol garnered some controversy, with proponents and opponents of affirmative action lining up in front of the Power Center for the Performing Arts to attend and protest his speech. In spite of about 20 protesters, hundreds of students and faculty filled the Power Center's auditorium to listen to Kozol. "If you took a photo of a typical inner-city school, it is indistinguish- able from a school in Mississippi and Alabama in 1940," he said. i ii . - - I