Wednesday, February 8, 2006 ,, I(I7R C {A'kNC) m r _ _ News 2 Motive for church fires unknown Opinion 4 From the Daily: New financial aid form hurts students One-hundredfifteen years of ed orzadfreedom i A Arts 8 Belle and Sebastian find new sound on latest release // www.michigandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 71 ©2006 The Michigan Daily Coalition accuses 'U' of racism Group says University lures black students in an effort to boost statistics, then fails to give them adequate * support to succeed By Kelly Fraser Daily Staff Reporter A new campus coalition is charging the University with racism and discrimination against blacks. The group, called the Coalition for Action Against Rac- ism and Discrimination, filed a formal complaint with the United States Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights last week. In the coalition's statement to OCR, Engineering master's student Simeon Anderson, who authored the statement, said black students are often recruited into doctorate programs to boost minority enrollment statistics, but encounter dis- crimination after they are persuaded to sign on. He claims black students are frequently intimidated by faculty and administrators, who discourage them from completing their degrees. The coalition claims professors often tell black students in the graduate engineering program that they're not "Ph. D. material" and should leave after completing master's- level requirements. University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said she could not comment on individual students' situations because of federal privacy laws, but she said the University has not yet received a formal notification of the charges. "The University is committed to increasing the par- ticipation of women and minorities in our graduate pro- grams, and we work very hard to remove barriers for these students, who remain underrepresented in many areas of graduate study," Peterson said in an e-mail interview. The 13-member coalition formed over the past two months. Members come from all levels at the University, including undergraduates, graduate students and profes- sors, Anderson said. Anderson said the problems are most serious in the Col- lege of Engineering. He said the common experiences of racial discrimina- tion within the group are not a coincidence. "This is a full assault on the African-American com- munity," he said. In the complaint, the coalition says the University's admis- sions policy creates a false impression and serves as "a veil for the University behind which the racism cesspool thrives." "It is not uncommon for students of color to experience misguidance in graduate programs," the coalition said. " "We are often intentionally misinformed, misled and given promises which are unfulfilled." According to Anderson, five students have completed a formal complaint with the OCR, and as many as 12 are expected to follow suit. The OCR is in the process of reviewing the complaint and is expected to decide whether it will launch an investi- gation into the allegations within the next 30 days, spokes- man David Thomas said. Thomas said if the claims are accepted, the specifics of each case will determine the course of the investigation. Anderson said he first voiced his concern to the Univer- sity administration in 2004, roughly two weeks after he enrolled in a graduate program at the Collegeof Engineer- ing, where he says he was misled and harassed. He said he was referred to several of the University's conflict resolution services and offices as well as to interim Engineering Dean Ronald Gibala, but Anderson said he either received no response to his complaints or found the response insufficient. "They don't do anything," Anderson said. Peterson said University President Mary Sue Coleman responded to three students's complaints in a personal let- ter dated Jan. 17. See COMPLAINT, page 7 Lack of plan dooms Iwireless Decentralization of University wireless coverage stems from Bollinger's presidency By Michael Kan Daily Staff Reporter Part of the answer to the question of why the campus does not have an overarching wireless network dates back to for- mer University President Lee Bollinger. According to Information Studies Prof. Robert Frost, the University is still reeling from Bollinger's lack of core lead- ership to establish wireless coverage on campus. As a result, each school at the University is working independently to develop its own wireless system. Frost criticized Bollinger, who could not be reached for comment, for ignoring wireless coverage. "He looked at the leadership as a trophy job and nothing got done," said Information Studies Prof. Robert Frost, who remembers Bollinger as a "spineless jerk." Administrators acknowledge that the deployment of wire- less across the campus is decentralized, but Frost called the system a complete mess. "It's going to take a lot of meetings and just general bullshit to get this done right," Frost said. "There was complete inco- herence in how things got rolled out." Within each University college is an information technol- ogy service center that directs the implementation of wireless at the school. Under the Bollinger administration, the University attempt- ed to lead this federation of IT services to gradually coordinate the development of a campus-wide wireless network, said Jose-Marie Griffiths, chief information officer for the University from 1996 to 2001. Griffiths's strategy was to form part- nerships and to collaborate between the IT services at the different schools to design a road map for wireless net- work deployment. Second in a three-part series about wireless coverage at the University LSA senior Charles Crissman was one of 11 students nationwide to win the Churchill Scholarship for outstanding academic accomplishment. The scholarship will send him to study mathematics at Cambridge University for one year. Student nabs prestgoo.us scholarship to study mt LSA Senior Charles Crissman's interests do not end with math By Carissa Miller Daily Staff Reporter When he was a high school student in Midland, LSA senior Charles Crissman hated math. But if his recent recognition as a Churchill scholar is any indication, his distaste for of numbers and equa- tions is a thing of the past. Crissman was one of 11 American students awarded the elite Winston Churchill Foundation Scholarship for this year. When he graduates this spring with degrees in math, linguistics and Italian, the scholarship will send Crissman to the University of Cambridge, where he will spend the next year studying math- ematics. "(Crissman) has an academic breadth that most applicants don't have. It's not required, but it appeals to us," said Elle- anor Crown, a scholarship coordinator of the LSA Honors program. "If I had to create a Churchill candidate out of whole cloth, he would be about what I'd come up with." The scholarship is based on an appli- cant's academic record, score on the Graduate Record Examination and let- ters of recommendation. With a GRE score of 1540 out of a possible 1600 and a 3.98 grade point average, Crissman more than met the criteria, Crown said. Although he said he felt his chances were good, he never actually expected the January phone call that informed him that he had won the scholarship. "I don't know if I've absorbed the fact I am going yet, he said. When he came to the University, Crissman thought he wanted to major in biochemistry and attend medical school. But by his sophomore year, Crissman realized what truly inspired him: math. See MATH, page 7 "We wanted to a build a coherent way to do this, rather than leave the smaller units behind. LSA's resources were very stretched," Griffiths said. "It was very difficult to see how LSA could do it on its own." Griffiths, who currently serves as the dean of the Univer- sity of North Carolina's school of information, said the first attempts began in the summer of 2000 with a pilot program at the Law School to install an extensive wireless network. A success, the pilot program essentially helped lay the foun- dations to create a campus-wide wireless network, Griffith said. A campus-wide network has yet to be achieved, but accord- ing to information technology administrators, collaboration continues successfully today. "Experts from across campus came together to set technical standards and prototype implementations; they continue to refine standards as technology changes," said Michael McPherson, former director of LSA's informa- tion technology program. "Schools, colleges and business units are deploying wireless access points to best meet their needs and priorities." But Frost said the University's fragmented approach has resulted in a lack of coherence. In the past, this has caused wireless networks from differ- ent schools to collide and interfere with each other. Also, in the absence of one overarching University wireless network, users have to re-authenticate or re-access a different wireless network each time they move to a new part of cam- pus that is part of another school. See WIRELESS, page 7 Victims turn out to . be felons in robberies RACING THROUGH THE SNOW Suspects face felony charges for filing false reports, attempting to dupe police By Anne VanderMey Daily News Editor Two armed robberies last month may still result in felony charges, but the robbers won't be the ones prosecuted, police said. In what Sgt. Richard Kinsey of the Ann Arbor Police Department describes as a "weird coinci- dence;' two robberies near campus on Saturday, Jan.24 were both determined to be fakes. The alleged robberies, which occurred with- in two hours of each other, have been investi- and forced to surrender his shoes, coat and $50. Kinsey said the student most likely faked the incident to garner sympathy from a friend. The incident on South Forest Street was not completely fabricated, police said. Using witness accounts, police established that the alleged victim, a cab driver for Shamrock Cabs, paid three men to push his car out of a ditch. The driver gave them $200. The men tried to push the car out of the ditch, failed and got into an argument with the driver. The driver asked for the money back, and the men responded by hitting him in the face. The driver claimed he was struck with a black handgun, but police now believe no gun was involved. Kinsey said despite the harsh penalties for offenders, faking a crime is not an very rare Committee to monitor spending Wary of repeating last fall's Ludacris debacle, assembly increases oversight By Andrew Grossman For the Daily In the wake of a widely criticized $20,000 loss on last fall's Ludacris con- cert, the Michigan Student Assembly has taken a step toward preventing similar losses in the future. MSA created the Event Financial Review