TO AID STATE ECONOMY, EXPAND 'U' FURTHER BEYOND A2 OPINION, PAGE 4 NO SOPHOMORE SLUMP BREAKING DOWN BE'S ROSE BOWL MATCHUP DAILY ARTS GIVES CLIPSE'S LATEST 5 STARS ARTS, PAGE 5 SPORTS, PAGE 8 IIE l id~gan OaiIlj Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Wednesday, December 13, 2006 WINTER BREAK-INS Over break, A2 thieves' winter wonderland Police offer tips on how to avoid losing your laptop, iPod By BRIAN TENGEL Daily StaffReporter Students across campus are get- ting ready for the winter holidays. They're hanging lights, dusting off menorahs and writing wish lists. There's one winter tradition, though, that students probably aren't looking forward to - the annual winter break crime wave. Year after year, students return from break to find a slashed win- dow screen or a broken dorm room lock. Electronics like computers and iPods are often stolen, forcing some students to trek to the Fish- bowl in silence for the rest of the year. Many break-ins result from stu- dents failing to lock down their rooms, houses or apartmentsbefore they head home, givingthieves easy access to valuable personal prop- erty. But sometimes, even locking the doors isn't enough to keep bandits out. Intruders occasionally get in by breaking doors open or climbing through accessible windows that can't be locked. Duringapast winterwbreaks, thieves have made off with bun- dles of holiday joy of their own. Last year, 15 burglaries occurred in 11 locations around Ann Arbor between Dec. 16 and Jan. 3. DVD players, computer equipment and other electronics were among the goods pilfered. The value of the sto- len property totaled an estimated $10,500. Thieves were also on top of their game during winter break in 2004. While most students were home celebrating, 24 homes were invaded and $55,000 in cash and property was reported stolen. Minutes after some students returned to campus, they were already adding a new Xbox to next year's wish list. Although winter recess is a par- ticularly bad time for break-ins, this year's Thanksgiving Break also saw an onslaught of dorm invasions. Over the four-day-long break, 16 rooms in Couzens Residence Hall and one in Alice Lloyd Hall were broken into. Luckily for students, the thieves only stole two iPods and several rolls of quarters. In hopes of preventing break-ins, the Department of Public Safety issued a list of precautionary mea- sures that students and staff should take before they head home for the holidays. In an e-mail, police said stu- dents should lock windows, doors, desks and closets to deter thieves. To prevent fire and save electricity, students should turn off appliances that might drain power. Ann Arbor Police Detective Sgt. Richard Kinsey also offered some tips to University students. He said students should have some- body check up regularly on their house, and heremphasized the importance of locking all doors and windows. He also said that AAPD adds extra patrols during the holiday season, but that's often not enough to keep burglars out. "There's only so much we can do," he said. AARUON HA NDELS'MA N/DUal LSA senior Franco Muzzio, former coordinator of the University's Assisting Latinos to Maximize Achievement program, says Nelson Acosta, director of the Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs, is failing to support the Latino community at a time when it needs support most. MESA: Open Latino orientation program to other ethnic groups Director says demands are unrelated to Prop 2 By AMANDA MARKOWITZ DailyStaffReporter It's been a tough year for the Latino community on campus, said Susan Lopez, coordinator of the University's Assisting Latinos to Maximize Achievement program. First, Proposal 2's passage cast a shadow of doubt over the future of the University's multicultural programs. Now, tension has built between the group and Nelson Acosta, director of the Office of Multi-ethnic Student Affairs, fol- lowing a disagreement over the relationship between MESA and ALMA's Latino Welcome Initia- tive. Since 2002, MESA has support- ed the LWI, a four-day orienta- tion program for incoming Latino students. But Acosta has said he wants to expand the orientation to include members of other eth- nic communities, including black, Native American and Arab stu- dents, rather than continue a pro- gram specifically tailored to Latino students. "I do not feel it is practical for MESA.to operate a series of pro- grams that address the same sup- port services for different ethnic communities," Acosta said in an e-mail interview. The LWI program, started in 1999, introduces students to the Latino community and the activi- ties and resources available to them on campus. Latino students move into their dorms early and participate in activities with other freshmen, faculty and older stu- dents. ALMA, a student organiza- tion, was formed in 2001 in response to problems with the retention of Latino students. Since then, the LWI has been its primary focus. Lopez, an LSA senior, said she supports Acosta's idea of a larger orientation program but disagrees with his approach. "The issue is that Mr. Acosta is under the impression that he has A DIALOGUE ON THE ISSUE What: A meeting between the Uni- versity's Assisting Latinosto Maximize Achievement program and the Office of Multi-ethnic Student Affairs When: Tomorrow at 7 p.m. Where: Kuenzel loom onfthe first floor of tbe Mitbigat Utior Who: Any member of the campus com- munity is invited to attend. control of exactly where our orga- nization goes, but we are a sepa- rate entity," Lopez said. "He does See ORIENTATION, page 3 SECURITY CHECKLIST Police recommend you take these steps to protect your campus home before leaving for Winter Break: Z Lock doors Z Latch/lock windows Turn off appliances Don't turn heat completely off Prof resigns from board in protest ADICTATOR'S LEGACY B Have someone cheCk on hOme Suture naluables Oldest historically black frat turns 100 Sole black member of student publications board claims he was marginalized By ANDREW GROSSMAN Daily StaffReporter Anthropology Prof Melvin Williams resigned from the Uni- versity's Board for Student Publi- cations last week, citing "a history of discrimination" on the board. In a letter to the board dated Dec. 7, Williams, who is black, claimed he had been marginalized because of his race by the other board members. He said the board failed to send him a card when his wife of 47 years died in 2005 - something he said wouldn't have happened to any other member. ' He also faulted the board for elect- ing two members as chairs who he said had less experience than him. Williams wrote that these were part of what he deemed indigni- ties. "They reflect a continuing pat- tern of behavior that is not seri- ously addressed by management or the board," he wrote. "When these patterns are addressed they meet stern resistance." The board, which oversees the long-term budget of The Michi- gan Daily, the Michiganensian yearbook and the Gargoyle humor magazine, has no control over the editorial decisions of any of the three. Jim Reische, one of the board's co-chairs, said Williams's resigna- tion came asa complete surprise. "None of us had any signs that Mel was dissatisfied with his posi- tion on the board," Reische said. Reische said he has not encoun- tered any complaints of discrimi- nation during his three years on the board but said he is concerned about its lack diversity - some- thing he said the board is working to address. In a second e-mail sent to board members on Dec. 7, Williams said the board should examine what he called an attack on Daily Business Manager Alexis Floyd. At the Dec. 4 meeting, board member Mark See RESIGNATION, page 3 A alun Thi Sittir room u of cam littered of the C Alpha] Seriguc for hisf "We as a frt LSA ju black m Alph oldest: tered f nial an Nota Martin Marsha Oni claims doctors with 65 tists an lpha Phi Alpha lawyers. Additionally, 95 percent of the leaders of historically black col- mni include MLK, leges and universities have ties to Alpha Phi Alpha, the website says. urgood Marshall The members have all memorized the fraternity's motto, "First of All, By DREW PHILP Servants of All, We Shall Transcend Daily StaffReporter All." LSA senior Ronnie Johnson Jr. ng in the immaculate living explained how it applied to every- f his fraternity house north day life. pus, far from the beer can- "To be a minority and have so 1 lawns and ragged porches few numbers, you have to tran- Central Campus fraternities, scend any and all competition," he Phi Alpha member Randal said. "It's important to be as flaw- hi explained what it meant less as possible." fraternity to turn 100. The University's chapter of the 're not having a celebration fraternity is devoted to keeping this aternity," said Seriguchi, an tradition alive. nior. "It's a celebration as To mark the centennial, the nen." brothers here held a program a Phi Alpha, the nation's called "The Extinction of the Black historically black Greek-let- Man, 100 years in Review." John- raternity marked its centen- son described it as a chance to edu- niversary Dec. 4. cate the local community about ble members have included the highs and lows of being a black i Luther King Jr., Thurgood man. all and W.E.B. Dubois. The fraternity also holds the its website, the fraternity annual "Miss Black and Gold" 60 percent of all black male scholarship pageant. But that's just as former members, along the beginning of the fraternity's 5 percent of black male den- community service projects. id 75 percent of black male See ALPHA PHI ALPHA, page 3 EMMA NOLAN-ABRAHAMIAN/Dal Romance Languages Prof. Christian Moreiras listens to a reading of names of victims of the regime of deceased Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet during a demonstration on the Diag yesterday. TODAY'S HI: 44 WEATHER LO: 36 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. LAST ISSUE BEFORE WINTER BREAK We resume publishing on Jan. 4. Until then, check michigandailycom for updates. -THE EDITORS INDEX NEWS...... ol. cviNo.6 SUDOKU.. X2006TheMicbiganPl NUOUy michigandoily~com DPI NION.. ..2 ARTS........... ..3 CLASSIFI DS .4 SPORTS....... .6 .8