Tuesday, April 11, 2006 Science 8 'U' scientists get microscopic Arts 10 'Benchwarmers' all cold ARE ''STUDENTS SEPA RATE3D R SE:GRE~GAT7ED? i z -':/Epp 4F 4ailjj Sports 11 Bass undergoes surgery, status uncertain One-hundred-sixteen years of editorialfreedom www.michigandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 110 ©2006 The Michigan Daily What could MCRI do to Cass? N Black students from high school renowned for quality academics have grades to get into 'U', but recruiters might be hard-pressed to reach them By Christina Hildreth Daily News Editor Across the state, activists on both sides of the debate are revving up for an' all-out war this fall to settle the fate of affirmative action. Both sides will court Michigan voters, who will decide whether to support the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, a proposal that seeks to ban some affirmative action programs in the state. Meanwhile, Tyrone Winfrey, director of the Universi- ty's Detroit Admissions Office, visits Lewis Cass Techni- cal High School, Detroit's largest magnet school. In his hundreds of visits to the school, Winfrey, a Cass Tech graduate and Detroit School Board member, is anxious to convince those final few admitted students 'A TV MA who have not yet decided to come to the University next Last in a four-part fall to commit. series It is uncertain how the proposal - which proponents argue would remove unfair racial preferences used in university admissions, government employment and public contracting - would change the relationship between schools like Cass Tech and the University. Cass Tech's student body is 95 percent black. The school usually sends more than 40 underrepresented minority students to the University each year. This is - largely due to the school's high academic standards as well as intensive recruiting efforts by Winfrey and his staff. The school offers 11 advanced placement courses and requires students to maintain a 2.5 grade point aver- age to stay enrolled. Affirmative action in action Because many of Cass Tech's seniors are academi- cally qualified to attend the University, quantifying just how much of an impact affirmative action admissions policies have on the number of Technicians admitted is nearly impossible, said Chris Lucier, associate director of admissions. He added that this is especially true given that the University's holistic admissions review process considers a variety of factors other than race. "I think that's a misunderstanding of the process to say that (admissions officials) say, 'Because of this factor, this student is admitted,' " he said. He explained that application reviewers look not only See CASS TECH, page 3 On Diag and across nation, immigration laws protested Tens of thousands of protesters take to streets in national day of action; students wear white, carry signs From staff and wire reports Tens of thousands of immigrants spilled into the streets in dozens of cities across the nation yesterday in peaceful protests in what organizers called a national day of action. Protesters have been urging Congress, whose immigration reform efforts stalled last week, to help the estimated 11 million illegal immi- grants settle here legally. In a more muted version of the rallies, students gathered on the Diag to protest and educate passersby about immigration. Standing on the steps of the Graduate Library, the students urged people to wear white in unity. About 10 students carried signs with mes- sages like, "No human is illegal." Behind them stood stalks of white balloons. "A clear path to citizenship is something we see as necessary'" RC senior Julia Malette said. "Leaving people undocumented encourages exploitation." Several students said they were strongly opposed to building a wao between the United States and Mexico to keep illegal immigrants out.- "Building walls is not going to keep people out," Malette said. She suggested the government look at the reasons why people wadi to emigrate from Mexico, which she said was the comparatively poor Mexican economy, and fix the problem at its root. Malette criticized the bills in the House and Senate as inhumane. "These are people contributing to our communities," she said "They deserve to have rights as much as the next person." The bulk of the students were from other campus groups like La Voz Latina, Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality and Migrant Immigrant Rights Awareness. The students have formed a coalition centered on the immigration debate. The coalition, which does not yet have a name, organized yes- terday's protest. One student standing near the steps of the Grad Library yesterday, James Simpson, who splits his classes between Eastern Michigan University and the University of Michigan, differed slightly from the group's position. Simpson said he supports immigration reformation, but said people need to follow the current laws for now. He said illegal immigrants need to be kept out of the United States. The event's organizers were quick to point out that Simpson is not affiliated with the group. In the Midwest, an estimated 3,000 people demonstrated in Garden City, Kan., a farming community that counts fewer than 30,000 resi- dents. In Champaign, Ill., hundreds of demonstrators marched along a busy street to the University of Illinois campus, carrying signs with slo- gans such as: "The pilgrims had no green cards." Yesterday's demonstrations followed a weekend of rallies in 10 states that drew up to 500,000 people in Dallas, 50,000 in San Diego, and 20,000 in Salt Lake City. Dozens of rallies and student walkouts, many organized by Spanish-language radio DJ's, have been held in cities from Los Angeles to Chicago to New York over the past two weeks. - Karl Stampfl contributed to this report. EMMA NOLAN-ABRAHAM IAN/ Daily Cass Tech student Jessica Steeples raises her hand in a biology class at the high school last month. If MCRI passes in November, University recruiters might have a harder time attracting Cass Tech grads. AfterNovember Current under- Predicted minority enroll- graduate minority ment under race-neutral Experts say minority enroll- .i ment will plummet if Michi- enrollment. admissions policy. gan voters approve MCRI. Here's a look at the numbers SOURCE: EXPERT WITNESS TESTIMONY FROM 2003 SUPREME COURT CASE < ...... A. syys,, x r} ' irr , {k. ,, f ; , : Levin: Congress unwilling to investigate White House Senator says tionally mandated system of checks As the ranking Democrat on the and balances, Levin said. Senate Armed Services Commit- November's midterm In Congress the controls commit- tee, Levin is intimately involved in elections key to change tees, all of which have investigatory military affairs. The committee is and subpoena powers. The Republi- mandated to provide "comprehensive By Michael Gurovitsch cans currently have a 55-44 majority study and review of matters relating Daily Staff Reporter in the Senate and a 232-202 majority to the common defense policy of the Errant soccer ball breaks sprinkler, floods West Quad Students' possessions ruined; three floors of Wenley House evacuated By Leah Graboski Daily Staff Reporter I 1 / 1 Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said yesterday that Democratic efforts to curb what he called the Bush admin- istration's "excessive power grab" have been fruitless and hampered by an unwilling Republican majority in Congress. The current lack of Congressional oversight amounts to the abdication of duty and the erosion of the Constitu- in the House. Levin said Republican leaders on key military and intelligence commit- tees refuse to conduct investigations or to order the Bush administration to turn over key documents and memos discussing important issues - includ- ing the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib prison, interrogation techniques used at the detention facility at Guantana- mo Bay and Iraq war intelligence. United States." Levin, speaking at the Michigan Union to Political Science Prof. Larry Greene's "Constitutional Law and Politics" and "Terrorism, War, and Due Processes" classes, illustrated the Democrats' investigatory impotence through the lens of prisoner abuse allegations at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility. See LEVIN, page 7 Researchers vie for state grants Let this be a lesson in playing soc- cer in dormitory hallways. A fire sprinkler head was knocked off by a soccer ball kicked by a stu- dent on the second floor of West Quad's Wenley House at about 8 p.m. last night, triggering the rest of the sprinkler system and flooding the ground, first and second floors. Three resident advisors and 82 students were affected. Some had made their own arrangements to stay with a friend for the night. Others were going to be put into one of three places. Some were placed in the two double rooms in Cambridge House of West Quad that are available year- round for emergency situations, and others in the nine available rooms in the Michigan League's hotel. Arrangements were also made to send about 20 students to the Holiday About 500 proposals submitted to state for share of $100 million By Ekjyot Saini Dailv StiffRenorter for research. The hope is that the find- ings could provide employment for local job seekers. For example, with the devel- opment of a new medication comes the need to market it, manufacture it and transport it. "This resoonse is beyond our motive and manufacturing, homeland security and defense and alternative energy. In life sciences, 164 proposals were submitted, the most in any given field, said Michael Shore, spokesman for the group that manages the fund, the Michigan Economic Development Cor- i ;z