TASTES GREAT, BUT.. TOP 10 WORST GOOD FOODS NEWS, PAGE 2A ALL OVER AGAIN DOES 'DEJA VU' TAKE ITS TITLE TOO SERIOUSLY? ARTS, PAGE 5A TOP-RANKED GOPHERS THRASH ICERS SPORTSMONDAY I e fficid in ilj on Arbor Michigan www.michigandaily.com Monday, November27,2006 'U' asks '.ou for SProp 2 solutions Campus invited to e-mail ideas on how to maintain diversity By WALTER NOWINSKI Daily Staff Reporter If you have any grand scheme - or even a small inkling - on how to preserve diversity on campus in the wake of Proposal 2, the Uni- versity would love to hear it. With less than a month before the state constitution- al amendment takes effect, the University administration has taken its first concrete step in response to the ban on affirmative action. In an e-mail to the entire campus, University President Mary Sue Coleman, along with Provost Teresa Sullivan, announced the formation of a diversity working group called Diversity Blueprints. The group will brainstorm ideas, for how to preserve campus diversity without the use of racial preferences. Sullivan, who is leading the working group, along with Senior Vice Provost for Aca- demic Affairs Lester Monts said it will try to find innova- tive and legal ways to main- tain and enhance diversity on campus. Although Coleman said she will not announce the group's full list of members until later this week, Sullivan said it will include faculty, students, administrators and alumni. The group has not yet been directed to examine any spe- cific policy, and Sullivan said it is open to any and all sug- gestions. The group is looking for ideas addressing policies in admissions, financial aid, outreach and campus envi- ronment. "Wearenotrulinganything off the table," Sullivan said. "The idea is to have a compre- hensive conversation." See PROP 2, page 7A After a season of shooting for the top, three teams look for their SECOND HELPING THREE SCENARIOS What each possibility could mean for Michigan's title-game aspirations USC wins, USC loses, USC loses, Florida wins or loses Florida wins Florida loses If USC defeats UCLA next weekened, Michigan will play in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1 in Pasadena. Chance of this happening: If USC loses to UCLA and Florida wins the SEC, then Michigan will likely play OSU, but a convincing Gators win could vault them into No. 2. Chance of this happening: UNLIKELY If both USC and Florida lose, Michigan will play in the national championship game. Chance of this happening: UNLIKELY Without diversity, B-School may suffer Prop 2 could turn recruiters away, some say By ALEX DZIADOSZ Daily StaffReporter Since Robert Dolan, dean of the Ross School of Business, first stepped into his spacious East University Avenue office six years ago, he's had a tough job: staying at the front of a cutthroat pack of American business schools. Now that Michigan vot- ers have banned affirmative action, his job might be get- ting harder. Diversity, Dolan has frequently said, is vital to the Business School's educa- tional philosophy. If his school's ability to fos- ter that diversity erodes, so might recruiters' tastes for its graduates. Need a car? Rent hourly Company brings a new zip to campus driving By KATIE L. WOODS Daily StaffReporter There's a new way to get around campus. Zipcars Inc., NorthAmer- ica's largest car-sharing company, set up a program in Ann Arbor last month. Here's how it works: Zip- car has provided Ann Arbor six self-service cars that can be rented by the hour. If you're at least 21 and a University student or faculty member, you can sign up for $30 online. The rental rate is $8 an hour or $60 a day. The annual fee is $50. For that price, you get insurance, maintenance, gas, an XM satellite radio and a designated parking spot on Central, North and Medical campuses. Local residents can join for $75. Members are also mailed a card that allows them to unlock and lock the vehicles during their designated time slots. The cars - two Toyota Matrixes, two Mazda 3s and two Ford Escapes - can be reserved at the spur of the moment or months in advance by booking online or calling in. Zipcar has more than 2,000 vehicles in North America, and members have access to all of them. The company's website boasts that members could save more than $436 a month because of the elimi- nation of car maintenance, insurance and gas. "I think offering stu- dents, especially those not yet 25 a means to get around sounds like a great idea," Engineering junior Alex Farr said. "I wasn't able to bring my car to cam- pus, and sometimes I just See ZIPCARS, page 7A PESRy SHOera Engineering senior Heeral Sheth and Business school junior Sunny Sethi study in the Ross Business School's Kresge Library yesterday. SETTING ROSS APART scant search for what he calls employers. A self-described "market- the "point of differentiation" That's why Dolan said he ing guy," Dolan knows the - the key set of qualities has focused on experiential importance of standing out. and skills that will make the learning, which he distin- His work, he said, is a con- school's graduates priceless to guished from the lecture and discussion-based models used by most schools. While students will find traces of traditional See B-SCHOOL, page 7A TODAY'S WEATHER HI: 56 GOT A NEWS TIP? LU: 47 Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and letus know. COMING TUESDAY After three years, over-the-counter contracep- tion on store shelves. NEWS INDEX Vol.CXVII,No.56 NEWS...... )2006 The Michigan Daily SUDOK U.. michigandaily.com OPIN1ON. ..2A ARTS..................... ....3A CLASSIFIEDS........ ....4A SPORTSMONDAY.. .5A .6A ...1B