12A - Wednesday, November 8, 2006 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com BY THE NUMBERS O0 Percentage decline in black enroll- ment at UC-Berkeley in year after Prop 209 passed After four decades of championing affirmative action ... '='!. LEADERS N O \MORE? By Anne VanderMey I Daily News Editor 96 Number of black stu- dents in this year's fresh- man class at UCLA 2,000 Dollars University Presi- dent Mary Sue Cole- man has donated to One United Michigan in the last 2 weeks, bringing her total donation to $7,500 Supreme Court jus- tices who voted to uphold 'U' affirma- tive action programs in 2003 Supreme Court jus- tices who voted against 'U' affirma- tive action programs in 2003 65-6 First year the University Law School began consid- ering race in admissions COURTESY OF THE BENT- LEY HISTORICAL LIBRARY (TOP), FILE PHOTOS (MIDDLE, BOTTOM) TOP: Protesters call for an end to racial inequality on the steps of Angell Hall during 1970's Black Action Movement strike. MIDDLE: James Duder- stadt,former University president, chats with students. Duderstadt created the Michigan Mandate as proost. BOTTOM: Members of the National Women's Rights Organizing Coalition marches for affirmative action in 1996. The University has been a lead- er in affirmative action for four decades. But its role as a key player may be over after yesterday's vote to ban most public affirmative action programs in the state. The Law School became one of the first schools in the country to enact affirmative action about 42 years ago. In the early sixties was not infrequent to have no black stu- dents in the Law School's gradu- ating classes. It was a worrisome reality for the school's admissions team at the time, said Law School Prof. Douglas Kahn, then a member of the admissions commission. In 1965, administrators decided to do something about it, creating the firstaffirmativeactionprogramatthe University. "We didn't draft a policy," he said. "We just did it. That was all there was to it." And so affirmative action was unceremoniously born on campus. Race-based admissions policies propagated across campus soon afterward. Minority presence on campus soared, but while affirmative action claimed some credit for a more integrated campus, a turbulent social climate and aggressive stu- dent activism was probably more directly responsible, history Prof. Matthew Lassiter said. In 1970, members of the Black Action Movement shut down cam- pus, demanding that the University enroll one black student for every tenwhite students. Kahnwas one of the few professors who attempted to hold class. He recalls protesters actually carrying one philosophy professor from the classroom. Eventually, the focus of the debate shifted from helping disad- vantaged minorities to embracing diversity as an end in itself. The MichiganMandate,craftedin 1987 by then-Provost James Duder- stadt, was an ambitious directive to University officials to admit or hire minorities whenever possible. Dud- erstadt has written that the mandate was in the tradition of P19-century University President James Angell's vision for the University to provide "an uncommon education for the common man." What was new about the mandate was itsfocus on diversi- ty's benefits to the University rather than to the disadvantaged. The program aimed to dramati- cally change the campus's racial composition by pushing to bring in enough minorities so that people of color would compose one-third of the student body. It didn't work. But it came close. Minority enrollment rose from 11 percentin1986 to 26 percent a decade later, close to the number today. Administrators say the mandate is at least partially responsible for this. The brewingnationalbattle over affirmative action came to a head in 2003 in the landmark cases Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger, when the University was forced to amend its strong raced-based admissions program, which award- ed students as many as 20 points on a 150-point scale for being of an underrepresented minority group. The University fiercely defended itself against charges of reverse discrimination to the very top of the country's justice system. "We would hear 'Thank you' wherever we went," Courant said. "That really is leadership." But the lawsuits were the begin- ning of the end of race-based admissions policies. Many of the same people who fought the Uni- versity in 2003 are now backers of Proposal 2. What they could not accomplish through the courts in 2003, Jennifer Gratz and company won yesterday in the ballot box. As affirmative action as we know it leaves campus, there has been little outcry.Thoughemotionsarerunning high, administrators don't expect protests to approach the scale of the Black Action Movementstrikes. Yesterday's vote signals the end of an era of University leadership. Though the University has commit- ted to pursuing an aggressive legal alternative to affirmative action, minority enrollment will almost certainly decrease. Once a bastion for affirmative action programs, the University will likely fall behind in diversity and multicultural pro- grams, as did California afterasimi- lar law passed there ten years agg. LawSchoolDeanEvanCaminker said yesterday that while the fiiial result of the ban is unknowable, the University may retain its spot in the limelight if there is significant legislative backlash, but he did not speculate about its likelihood. "We'll wait and see," he said. 72 Percentage of black stu- dents who now gradu- ate within six years of entering the Univer- sity - up 10 percent from 1990 REACTION - From page lA Percentage of this year's freshman class that is H is panic Percentage of this year's freshmanc class that is black for Ward COMING FR IDAY.: The former universify of Califor- nia system regenf helped topple af firmation atin in Califurnia with Pru pusitiun 209 in 1996 an d in Michigan yesterday. Is his crusade lust beginning? Purdy recalled a campus visit Monday during which Debbie Din- gell, wife of congressman John Din- gell, heralded the results of a recent poll that showed Proposal 2 losing by a margin of about 10 points. "It's been the talk of the town," Purdy said. "It really fired people up, motivated them." Jenn Pae, a University of Califor- nia at SanDiego graduate with "first- hand Ward Connerly experience," said that it was still anybody's game. A fewstudentshadevenbussedin from Wisconsin, which is rumored to be Connerly's next stop in his cru- sade against affirmative action. Nearby, LSA senior Kellyn Parker cut a path away from the flyers and pamphlets. Proposal 2 was impor- tant to activists, he said, but the stu- dent body seemed mostly apathetic. "We hear about the issues," he said. "But we still have to take exams." AFTERNOON On his way from the precinct at East Quad Residence Hall, Eastern Michigan University student Bren- dan Keeley paused by a column swathed in warped anti-Proposal 2 posters - some handmade, some carefully crafted and printed. Proposal 2 is bad policy, he said, a bill pushed past an unsuspecting electorate with a fraudulent title - it's also known as the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative - and ques- tionable rationales. But Michigan, he said, is a notori- ously divided state. "Outside of Ann Arbor, man, I don't know," he said. "Just go north of here. It's a different world." Despite his opposition to the proposal, he said his overall reac- tion would likely be "much of what everyone else's is" - simple leth- argy. "It's a bit of dark thinking," he said. "But it's realistic." Across campus, near Mr. Greeks restaurant, an LSA senior seemed to confirm Keeley's fears. "I barely know Proposal 2," he said. "I feel that the people on the Diag are so focused on getting you to vote, they don't take the responsi- bility to educate you on the issues." "Yeah, they did," his friend inter- rupted. "You just didn't take the responsibility to educate yourself" "Fine," he said. "I just don't care. I'm not from Michigan." EVENING The pale light, shrouded by thick clouds throughout the day, was fad- ing by 6 p.m. In the Michigan Union, the last ebb of voters were filing through the Pendleton Room. About 20 feet below the thin cardboard booths, others mulled more immediate choices: sandwich toppings and smoothie flavors. One LSA junior sat browsing study-abroad options for next semester. He's generally for affir- mative action, he said, but didn't register to vote this year. "This just isn't my election," he said. About 30 feet away, seniors Cheryl Clark and Sabrina Biggens were studying. Both had voted "no" on Proposal 2 earlier in the day. Upstairs, the polls were closing. "I'll be utterly disappointed if it passes," Clark said. "People don't feel it will affect them as much as they should." Butskepticism is just another part of being black in America, Biggens said, particularly since the 2004 re- election of President Bush. "There's a disenchantment between voting and what will actu- ally happen," she said. "We know it's the right thing to do, but it doesn't seem like it matters." By 9 p.m., early reports showed Proposal 2 up by about 30 percent. NIGHT For many campus activists, the day culminated at Leopold Broth- ers, a bar on Main Street, or in an East Jefferson living room, where the College Democrats held their victory party. At Leopold Brothers, members of the Graduate Employees Orga- nization and Students of Color of Rackham were gathered around the bar's long wooden tables. It was a time for them to loosen nerves taut from three weeks of intensive phone banking and canvassing with beer and nachos. "People here are hopeful, but try- ing to be realistic," said Courtney Cogburn, president of Students of Color of Rackham. "If (Proposal 2) does pass, we're thinking abouthow things will change." When asked how he thought it would turn out, Students Support- ing Affirmative Action member Hugo Shi shrugged. "We'll find out soon." On East Jefferson Avenue, Purdy had shed her donkey outfit. In a Col- lege Democrats shirt, she joined the mass of students packed in small blue living room of College Demo- crats member Molly Bates's house. Spirits were still high. Over Jell- O shots, Purdy pointed out that the first reports were from Alpena - not the most representative section of the Michigan population. By 10 p.m., more reports were streaming in. Granholm and Stabenow's victo- ries were met with cheers. Dingell's lopsided win with mostly laughter. Proposal 2 alone bred silence. Its advantage was eroding, but not fast enough. LSA senior Staci Daniels panto- mimed a trickling motion, showing that the precinct counts were working their way southward, toward more liberal parts of the state. "Detroit will balance it out," she said. As she spoke, a Proposal 2 vic- "We hear about the issues. But we still have to take exams." -LSA senior Kellyn Parker, on student apathy to Proposal 2 tory party in an East Lansing Mar- riott Hotel was gearing up. Ryan Fantuzzi, chair of the Washtenaw County Michigan Civil Rights Ini- tiative, was jubilant. "I feelgreat. In abouthalf anhour we're going to be breaking out the champagne," he said. "We'll finally be able to focus on the real issues." Alongside Ward Connerly, he described an atmosphere of relief and triumph. "You can feel it in the air. It's very light. It feels like it's Christmas Eve." Also in Lansing, a slightly more cautious, but equally pleased AndrewBoyd, chair of Young Amer- icans for Freedom, offered his reac- tion. "At least one part of Michigan is going in the right direction," he said, referring to the other races, which ended in almost exclusively Democratic victories. "I'm very encouraged, very happy," he said. "It's great we'll finally have equality." The atmosphere back on East Jef- ferson was conflicted. As CNN announced that national Democrats had taken control of the House, the room erupted in anlause. Just a few were silent. Proposal 2 hadn't been called yet, but it had a sizeable lead. Purdy and Daniels took the opportunity to exit quietly, saying little and keeping their emotions in check. "We put hours of work into it," LSA sophomore Brent Durr said. "I thought we probably had a chance because of the way it was phrased." Durr, who said he marked white on his University application despite his half-black, half-Mexican heritage, opposed Proposal 2 in part because of his personal experiences with racial prejudice. Back at Leopold Brothers, Shi's voice was tense. "This is bad for us, bad for the state, and bad for the University." Earlier, near the Diag, an LSA sophomore and freshman admitted that they had not heard of Proposal 2 before yesterday. "I don't twhink they should total- lyban (affirmative action),"onesaid, but added she hadn't registered in time to vote. "I really should be registered," she said and turned toward her friend. "I'll be registered soon." "It's a little late now." he renlied. 4 PROP 2 PASSES From page lA "We did a great job on campus," Tanner said. "But ultimately the lies and deceptions prevailed." While Michiganvoters approved Proposal 2 by a 16-percent mar- gin with 95 percent of precincts reporting as of 4 a.m. last night, University students voted deci- sively against the amendment. In predominantly student precincts around campus, Proposal 2 failed 75 to 21 percent. The amendment to the state Con- stitution will go into effect some- time in late December, depending on the day that the Secretary of State certifies the election results. Unless a judge delays the imple- mentation of the amendment, the Universitywillbeforcedtochangeits admissions policies halfway through this year's admissions cycle. Marvin Krislov, the Universi- ty's general counsel, confirmed last week that the University may request a stay to delay the imple- mentation of the amendment. In the coming weeks, University administrators will have to review admissions, hiring and outreach programs to ensure that they are in compliance with the new law. In an interview earlier this month, Maya Kobersy, assis- tant general counsel, said while reviewing programs, the Univer- sity would look for ways to main- tain diversity. Julia Darlow, a Democrat who was elected to the Board of Regents yesterday, said the Uni- versity should support an inter- pretation of the new law that will preserve as many of the Universi- ty's programs as possible. Students at the College Democrats election-watching party last night react to early precinct returns predicting the passage of Proposal 2. I