WHITNEY DIBO: WHAT NOT TO DO HAWKEYES CLAW THEIR WAY ON NEW YEAR'S EVE IN GEORGIA I W HEN I W AS YOUR AGE BACKIN WIN AGAINST CAGERS OPINION, PAGE 4A ) DAILY ARTS WAXES NOSTALGIC FOR FIFTH GRADE THE B-SIDE SPORTS, PAGE 5A e MidiganBa4& Ann Arbor Michigan wwwmichigandalycom Thursday February1,2007 Say no to pro-Prop 2 survey,'U' tells profs Suit that began it all ends Group was trying to smoke out affirmative action programs By BRIAN TENGEL Daily StaffReporter An anti-affirmative action group that filed a lawsuit against the University has distributed surveys to faculty to gather information about the University's current and futureaffirmative action poli- cies. The surveys were distribut- ed by Toward a Fair Michigan which is associated with the organization that coordinated the pro-Proposal 2 campaign last fall. Representatives from the group said the survey will help document what affirma- tive action polices around the state look like now that the consideration of race, gender and national origin has been banned. Administrators are urging faculty not to participate in the survey. In an e-mail message sent to faculty and staff last week, University Provost Teresa Sullivan advised recipients of the survey to refrain from participating because the group is suing the Univer- sity. Toward a Fair Michigan filed suit to get the University to comply immediately with Proposal 2, but dropped the case on Tuesday. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham elaborated on Provost Sullivan's caution- ary e-mail. "The concern was that this third-party was suingthe Uni- versity on an issue directly related to the subject matter of the survey," Cunningham said. "And the survey was structured so that responses would be recorded 'on behalf of' the University. It was for these reason that the office of the General Counsel recom- mended that recipients should not respond." Cunningham said the Uni- versity doesn't have a general policy for dealing with third- party surveys. William Allen, a Michigan State University professor and the group's co-founder of Toward a Fair Michigan, said the survey is meant to ensure that institutions are comply- ing with Proposal 2 and to generate discussion about affirmative action. "Our own research has already established that much can be done to further equal opportunity compatibly with the new legal reality," Allen said. "We believe it of value, however, to provide full reas- surance based on the actual record of practices in place and pending.", The survey asks partici- pants to discuss the institu- tion's history with affirmative action, if the institution is currently involved in litiga- tion and to indicate plans for reviewing affirmative action policies. It is 12 questions long, and requires a password, which was included in the e-mails sent to the prospective partici- pants. Allen said some people have surreptitiously attained the password and taken the exam. But this is of no conse- quence, he said, because only the surveys completed by the invited participants will count. Suit against'U' admissions policy settled after 10 years in court By WALTER NOWINSKI Daily Staff Reporter A decade-long court battle over the University's affir- mative action policies ended yesterday when a district court dismissed Gratz v. Bol- linger after a settlement was reached. Under the terms of the settlement, the University will pay Jennifer Gratz and Patrick Hamacher $10,000 each for incidental expenses related to the litigation. In turn, they will drop all claims against the University. The University will not pay Gratz and Hamacher any damages. Yesterday's settlement brings to an end what was perhaps the most important court case in the University's 190-year history. By appear- ing in headlines nationwide, it helped define the University as one of the foremost cham- pions of affirmative action. In 1997, after being denied admission to the University, Gratz and Hamacher filed a lawsuit claiming that the University's race-based affir- mative action policies caused them to be unfairly rejected because they were white. Then-University President Lee Bollinger passionately defended the University's con- sideration of race andcommit- ted the University to a court battle that would eventually make its way to the Supreme Court. Because California voters had banned affirmative action programs a year earlier, the court challenge refocused the national debate over affirma- live action on the University of Michigan. By the time the U.S. Dis- trict Court for the Eastern District of Michigan finally heard oral arguments on the case in November 2000, the case had already garnered a considerable amount of public attention. Numerous corporations, unions and civic and religious organizations lined up behind the University in support of affirmative action. When the University filed its Supreme Court briefs in February 2003, more than 300 outside organizations had joined the University in its defense of affirmative action policies. On Dec. 13, 2000, Judge Patrick Duggan of the dis- trict court ruled that the Uni- versity's admissions policies between 1995 and 1998 were unconstitutional but upheld its admissionspolicies for1999 and 2000. Bollinger called this verdict "an unequivocal ruling in our favor" and said the court affirmed that con- sidering race was "completely justified." But the case was not to end there. The University continued to consider race in admissions as the Gratz case made its way though the appeals process and court after court refused to issue an injunction prohib- iting the University from con- sidering race. In December 2002, the Supreme Court decided to hear the Gratz case as well as a similar case, Grutter v. Bollinger, challenging the University of Michigan Law School admissions policies. At the time, many speculat- ed that the conservative-lean- ing Supreme Court might rule against the University, deliver- ing a devastating blow to affir- mative actionprograms. Any questions about the See GRATZ, page 7A Engineering professors Stephen loather (right) and Michael Liemoho (left) with a glohe of Mars, The two men are memhers ofUniversity-based teams competing forgrantsto send probes to explore the Red Planet. RED PLANET RUMBLE APPETITE FOR CONSUMPTION Two'U'engineering teams compete for NASA grant to explore Mars atmosphere By PAUL BLUMER Daily StaffReporter They work in the same campus build- ing. They have the same goal. And now Stephen Bougher and Michael Liemohn are competing against each other for a multimillion-dollar grant from NASA. Bougher and Liemohn are members of two separate University teams, each with a directive from NASA to build instru- ments to study the upper atmosphere of Mars. The competition began about nine months ago, with over 20 teams vying for NASA funding. NASA selected two of the teams to receive initial funding of $2 mil- lion. Both of them happen to be from the University. The teams have until late 2007 to refine their proposals, when NASA will select one tobe part of a $475 million project to design and build the instruments slated to orbit Mars in late 2011. Bougher and Liemohn are both researchers in the Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences department. Bougher's project - headed by Alan Stern at Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo. - is dubbed The Great Escape. Liemohn is part of the Mars Atmo- sphere and Volatile Evolution team, which is led by Bruce Jakosky at University of Colorado at Boulder. The instruments will gather data on the structure and dynamics of the upper atmosphere of the Red Planet. Orbiting at more than 100 kilometers above the sur- face, the instruments will measure the effect of charged particles from the sun - called solar wind - on the atmosphere. "Both proposals are quite similar," Bougher said. No matter who wins, the scientists said the mission will benefit the University. Because two University teams are com- peting for the funding, the ultimate deci- sion will "bring something to Michigan no matter what," Bougher said. The University will receive $4-5 mil- lion. Both teams also include graduate students. The mission is scheduled for late 2011, aiming for a window of time when the paths of Earth and Mars are sufficiently aligned to enable the launch and sub- sequent orbit. The window opens every two years. See MARS, page 7A Mike Powers looks for a new pair of shoes at Launch Board Shop on South University Avenue near Church Street. Date auction courts controversy Fundraising effort draws ire from 0 administration By JESSICAVOSGERCHIAN Daily StaffReporter Want to eat burritos with a likely first-round NFL draft pick? Enchiladas with a cal- endar model? The members of Project Suyana, a group that raises money for health care in Peru, hope you'll pay bigbucks for a Mexican dinner with students ranging from defensive end Lamarr Woodley to Michelle Rosado, who appears in a calendar called the "Girls of Michigan." Project Suyana will sell dates with twenty students at an auction tomorrow night in an effort to raise money for a Peruvian women's shelter. Attendees will bid on dinner at Salsarita's Fresh Cantina, a new Mexican restaurant on East Liberty Street, with one of 20 men and women at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the ballroom of the Michigan Union. The University's website for student organizations says a date or "slave" auction "devalues a human being to the level and merchandise" and "has the appearance of actual slave auctions." Event organizers said they were unaware of the advisory policy. Project Suyana found- er Yasmin El-Sayed said she doesn't see anything wrong with the auction. The University's advisory guidelines also stress the risk of sexual assault when someone is forced to go out with someone who might be a stranger. The statement on date auc- tions was added to the index within the last few years was taken from another school's policy almost word for word, said Susan Wilson, the Uni- versity's director for student activities and leadership. The policy came out of a See AUCTION, page 7A Members of Students Supporting Affirmative Action celebrate the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in two affirmative action cases during a rally on the Diag on June 23, 2003. BIDDING FOR LOVE Men up for auction: Women up for auction: 0 Michitar foofball player Lumart Boodlep bpMichigancheerleaderAriel Haskins 0 Michigan Student AssemblyRep. 0 Arab StudentAssociation member Tony Saunders Dina Ai-oburi 0 Basketball player Ron Coleman 0 Girls of Michigan Calendar model Michelle Rosado 0 Law student Josh Tetrick 0 LSA sophomore Caitlin Cohan d nterfruternity Council President lured r7errch 0 [SA juniorAlisa Sumrkin 0 Mr. Engineer 2007 Brian Posfer 0 Project Suaua member Preeli pyer TODAY'S WEATHER H1:16 GOT A NEWS TIP? LO: 1B Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. COMING FRIDAY What did you do over Winter Break? One student won the Price is Right. NEWS INDEX NEWS ....... Vol. C ,No.88 SUDOKU... 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