10C - The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - Fall 2005 UNIVERSITY IJ' renovates By Aymar Joan SEPTEMBER 24, 2004 Daily Staff Writer University Housing officials detailed plans to signifi- cantly improve on-campus housing, including plans for at least one new residence hall, renovations to two exist- ing dorms and an overhaul to dining services. The proposals, part of the Residential Life Initiatives, have been in development for months. They result from years of University research signaling the relatively poor condition of on-campus housing. For more than 30 years, the University has not built a new residence hall, even as the incoming classes have increased. The University expects to begin building the new residence hall in 2006, and it will not be finished until 2008. The University plans to renovate Mosher-Jordan Hall or Stockwell Hall in 2006, and the other in 2007, so that both are completed by 2008. During that time some stu- dents will have to relocate to North Campus. The University also plans to begin constructing two new dining cafeterias in 2006 and make fire and other safety improvements on existing dorms. Administrators estimate all the new plans will cost $250 to $280 million, but said that these numbers are just preliminary.No additional housing rate increases are expected beyond the typical 5 percent annual increases. "Our efforts tie very closely to the president's ini- tiative to reconnect, renovate and expand residential life on campus," University Housing Director Carole Henry said at a University Board of Regents meeting. University President Mary Sue Coleman has, admin- istrators say, staked her presidency on improving residential life, believing it essential to recruit the best students and create small living communities. Despite the comprehensive nature of the housing plan, " to improve s several regents at the meeting were skeptical of its impact. At least two presentations proposing radical changes to housing have been made in the past decade, but progress was stalled when key administrators, including former President Lee Bollinger, left for other schools. Regents approved a resolution in 2001 giving direction to Univer- sity Housing to build a new residence hall. When elected in 1994, University Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R-Ann Arbor) made housing her per- sonal priority. Before her term expires in 2008, she said she would like to see results. "We are putting significant pressure on the president to move this," she said. "People here need to understand, the frustration factor on the board level" "Something needs to be done on this campus in terms of housing because we're not keeping up," she added. "We are behind, and we've been behind." Several regents, including Olivia Maynard (D- Goodrich), echoed this sentiment and urged University Housing to move forward promptly on its recommenda- tions. Maynard suggested that next month Henry bring to the board some specific price information. The new hall will feature apartment or suite-style housing, private bathrooms and living rooms, which have become increasingly popular over the years. "Those days are over," Henry said, referring to past halls that relied on communal bathrooms and narrow hallways. The new hall will most likely include 500 to 650 beds, and University Housing will make a considerable effort to create small living communities in clusters of 20 to 25 students in the hall. But the total capacity of the Univer- sity's residence halls may not increase by much because some beds will be lost in halls where Housing creates communal spaces. Henry said two of the most distinctive and memo- rable halls on campus, Mosher-Jordan and Stockwell, are first in line for renovations. Next would be Betsy tudent living Barbour House, Helen Newberry House and West Quad Residence Hall. During that process, University Housing will have to shut down each hall, one at a time, for an entire school year. For those renovations, students will most likely have to relocate to North Campus, where administrators believe there is ample space to accommodate this relocation. Overall, renovations could take up to 20 years. For new dining services, University Housing envi- sions a marketplace setting with restaurant-quality din- ing. One possible option could be grilling stations or pasta bars. New dining centers will be located on Cen- tral Campus and the Hill area, while Bursley Hall and East Quad's centers will get renovations. West Quad, Bursley and halls on the Hill could also receive emporiums, which are a blend of a restaurant and convenience store with cafe-seating, computers and even plasma televisions. At least one dining center is expected to open in 2008. At the same time, University Housing will continue to make technology and safety improvements, includ- ing an upgrade of fire alarms in all halls by 2007 and the installation of fire suppression systems, such as sprin- klers, by 2011. Such improvements will cost $7 to $10 million each year until improvements are completed. The new residence hall is not necessarily intended to alleviate the housing crunch, which was caused by the marked increase of about 500 extra freshmen. This year's unexpectedly large freshmen class was a "blip" and should not happen again, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. Instead, the new hall will cater to upperclassmen - but will not be restricted to them, Henry said. Univer- sity Housing has found that demand by upperclassmen for on-campus housing is high when their desires are met: single rooms, apartments and private bathrooms. 0 S0 Stockwell will be one of the first dorms to undergo renovations. For some international students, uncertain road toUnited States By Alexa Jenner SEPTEMBER 22, 2004 Daily Staff Writer After completing her undergraduate degree at Lawrence University in Wisconsin, Wenjie Chen, an international student from Germany, decided she wanted to come to Ann Arbor to get her doc- torate in economics. Even though she had spent four years studying in the United States, she still had to go through the new procedures of applying for a visa. "It's a long process, and definitely a frustrating one," Chen said. Since the 1800s the University has accepted international students from around the world, but with tightening homeland security measures, the process of coming to America has left many inter- national students feeling like criminals, Chen said. In September, the government passed another law that will affect next years' applicants to the University. Now, before international or foreign exchange students can even'apply for a visa they must pay a $100 Student and Exchange Visitor Information System fee. The SEVIS fee goes to the officials who work with the system's electronic database that track all international scholars in the United States. The database has become a major part of home- land security since the Sept. 11 attacks. In 1993, after the first World Trade Center terrorist attack involved an international student, the government created this electronic database to track all inter- national students entering the United States. But without sufficient funds, the system was not that effective. After the Sept. 11 attacks, however, this system became a requirement for all international scholars. Now, every international student is in the system and can constantly be monitored. Although Chen did not have to pay the new SEVIS fee, the process of coming to America was a tiring one. "The first thing I had to do was call for an appointment at the (U.S.) Embassy. In Germany you used to just have to send in your information but now you have to go in for an interview," she said. Chen had to wait six weeks for her interview with embassy officials. She said her patience was tested even further as she arrived at the embassy and was forced to stand in line for three and a half hours. "The process takes longer than it should but the University works with you to get through it," she said. Once Chen made it through the waiting process her interview went smoothly and she received her visa, but the element of fear did not dissipate there. At the American airport Chen had her eyes scanned and her fingers printed. "How would you feel if you had to go through that? I felt like I was in prison," she said. Chen was then put into the electronic database. "I had 30 days to check in at the University, other- wise my visa would be terminated, and I'd have to go through the whole process again," Chen said. The University is trying its best to make the transition easier for international students. Kay Clifford, the associate director at the University's International Center said, "the process yields a lot of anxiety, and the admissions office, the student affairs office, the academic departments and our federal relations department are all working as a team to help these students and exchange visitors. Although students such as Chen did not have difficulty getting a visa once they went through the interview process, some must wait three weeks to a year for their visa to be processed. If there is something "sensitive" in the interview, the report is sent to Washington where a security advisory opinion - essentially a second review of the student's background - takes place. "It is hard to say what exactly characterizes something as 'sensitive,' but often we find that students who are studying nuclear engineering or an area with bio in the title are forced to go through this sec- ondary process," Clifford said. "Students don't always know if they had to go through a security advisory opinion. All they know is that it took days or even months to get a visa," Clifford said. Unlike Chen's visa, which will last her five years, visas issued after the student has gone through a secondary advisory opinion only last a year. "Our aim is to get visas issued in 30 to 60 days, because that's the biggest stress these students are dealing with, and we also are working to get the visas to last for the time needed for the student to complete his or her studies," Clifford said. As these struggles have continued to increase, John Godfrey, the assistant dean of International Education at Rackham, has begun submitting let- ters with some of the students' interviews, where a faculty member from that student's department explains in depth what the student will be doing here. The International Center hopes that this will prevent an unnecessary secondary screening. "I think the University has done a fantastic job in letting the students know we're here for them and we care. It's very supportive in helping these stu- dents through this process," Clifford said. A survey by the Council of Graduate Schools results show that applications from international graduate students declined by 28 percent from 2003 to 2004 nationwide, while admissions declined 18 percent over the same period, Godfrey said. "We won't have the final figures until the offi- cial third week count is completed, but this drop reflects the problems international students have been facing with visas," Godfrey said. Although there was a decrease in the number of international graduate applicants to the Uni- versity, the number of undergraduate applications increased this year, said Cindy Gould, the senior admissions counselor for undergraduate interna- tional students. For the time being, the University is doing what it can to help students get through this stressful process - from providing fact sheets on what an international student can expect upon arrival to asking students how the whole procedure was for them and what needs to be changed. Although it is hard to say whether the newly instated SEVIS fee will discourage international students next year, administrators said they are confident that the University will continue to offer their support and services to the international stu- dents and exchange visitors. _ We could have listed all the concerts, sports events, lectures, publications, free trips to Israel, theater productions, social justice projects, alternative spring break trips to South America and fun parties we have... ...but we only have one page. - - . I