JARED GOLDBERG: THE WAR ON HANUKKAH OPINION, PAGE 4A iT? J DILLA? JEEZY? FOCUS ON GLASSWORK KEY FOR CAGER DEFENSE DAILY ARTS DEBATES THE TOP ALBUM$OF 2006 THE B-SIDE SPORTS, PAGE 5A Wie lNRXidENganF a ) E... . .. ) ,. . .. ..I ! ES Y E . .\ FF4 .1 .YYC)1- E .5 i F R . EI )O.M nn Arbor Michigan www.michigandaily.com Thursday, January11, 20T7 Despite Prop 2, race will stay on applications 'U'to trust The University has not yet finalized next year's admissions undergraduate application, but administrators decided officers to ignore against removing race and gender from this year's appli- race, gender cations that haven't been submitted. By BRIAN TENGEL "The application is exactly DailyStaffReporter the same as it was yester- day and last week and last The race and gender of month," Peterson said. applicants will remain on The University of Cali- application forms when fornia system, which was admissions officers review barred from considering them, the University said race and gender in admis- yesterday. sions by a similar ballot ini- Yesterday marked the first tiative in 1996, chose to not day the University was not allow admissions counselors allowed to use affirmative to view a student's race and action in admissions, which gender on the application. was banned by Proposal 2 in Although a student can November. report this information, it Instead of blacking out isn't included in his files the information, admissions given to the officers. officers have been instruct- Peterson said the Univer- ed to disregard the race and sity would rely on trust to gender of potential students ensure that race and gender when evaluating their appli- aren't taken into consider- cations, University spokes- ation. woman Julie Peterson said. "Our counselors are ethi- "There's nothing in Pro- cal people with integrity, posal 2 that says race has to but we can't crawl inside the be a secret," Peterson said. mind of an admissions coun- "It's simply not going to be selor," Peterson said. factor in our decision." She said officers would just ignore the race and gen- der sections of the applica- tions while considering other information about the appli- cant. "If you think this is subjec- tive, you need to understand the whole process is subjec- tive," she said. "We're look- ing at things like leadership and motivation. All those things are personal and sub- jective. So we will do what we always have done: train our counselors." In an e-mail to the campus community addressing the University's response to Pro- posal 2, University President Mary Sue Coleman and Pro- vost Teresa Sullivan noted that Proposal 2 doesn't apply to federally funded programs that use affirmative action. One such program is the Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation. The program's goal is to increase minority participation and success in math, technol- ogy, science and engineering. Race and gender can still be considered in the program's admissions decisions, because it is funded by the National See APPLICATIONS, page 7A PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ROB MIGRIN/Daily High textbook prices are a near-constant source of complaints from students at the University. Students sometimes spend more than $600 each semester on books. Pne tackles high cost o books Suggestions: Put reading lists online, create MSA liaison By EMILY ANGELL Daily StaffReporter At least it was unseason- ably warm as LSA freshman & Robin Goldberg stood in line outside campus bookstore Shaman Drum lastweek. Nothing else seemed to be going her way. "Because so many profes- sors only order from Shaman Drum, I'm forced to come here and pay their prices," she said. "I have a friend who is triple-majoring and had to take on a second job just to pay for her textbooks." In an attempt to address the high cost of textbooks, the Michigan Student Assem- bly and LSA Student Govern- ment held a forum last night in the Pendelton room of the Michigan Union to discuss textbook prices with Uni- versity administrators, book- store owners and students. The panel, which included Senior Vice Provost for Aca- demic Affairs Lester Monts and Shaman Drum owner Karl Pohrt, among others, tried to answer students' questions about the textbook market. Most of the questions asked during the hour-and- a-half long forum concerned the rising cost of textbooks and why the University isn't doing more to foster competi- tion in the textbook market. Suggestions included posting reading lists in advance and uploading readings online. Monts defended the University's decentralized approach to textbooks. "The provost's office rec- ognizes the problem and con- tinues to work on it," Monts said. "We know the cost of education continues to rise, and if we can lessen other costs, then we will." Individual professors or departments, not the Univer- sity administration, decided where to order textbooks from. But many students argued that the University could eas- ily lessen the burden of high textbook prices by simply requiring instructors to place their book lists online before classes start. But Colette Alexander, a book purchaser at Shaman Drum, advised against that. "The problem is that some- times professors request books that are out of print or unavailable," Alexander said. "If book lists are released early, students will spend money on books that ulti- mately won't be used." LSA sophomore Ricky Chis disagrees. He decided to buy his books online this year after becoming frustrated with textbook prices at local campus bookstores. "I used to shop locally, but the books are so overpriced," he said. "I used Half com this time and saved about $300." Some departments, like math and economics, already post book lists online before classes start, but the prac- tice is not uniform across the campus. Pohrt, who has owned Shaman Drum for 27 years, had another suggestion. He advised MSA to elect a liaison between the student popula- tion and the local bookstores. "If a few students can learn how these businesses work and then report back to the student population, we have a better chance at finding a solution," he said. . Another solution proposed at the forum was for profes- sorstouploadmoreofrequired readings to sites like ctools. See BOOKS, page 7A Task force goes to the drawing board Bush admits mistakes in Iraq, dispatches more troops Democrats say president is on wrong course WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush acknowl- edged for the first time last night that he erred by not ordering a military buildup in Iraq last year and said he was increasing U.S. troops by 21,500 to quell the country's near-anarchy. "Where mis- takes have been made, the responsibility rests with me," Bush said. . The buildup puts Bush on a collision course with the new Democratic Congress and pushes the American troop presence in Iraq toward its highest level. It also runs counter to widespread anti- war passions among Ameri- cans and the advice of some top generals. In a prime-time address to the nation, Bush pushed back against the Democrats' calls to end the unpopular war. He said that "to step back now would force a collapse of the Iraqi government, tear that country apart and result in Legal action, outreach suggested at forum By JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN Daily Staff Reporter On a day that marked the beginning of an uncertain new era for the University's admissions policies, members of the campus community dis- cussed the road ahead. The Diversity Blueprints Task Force, formed to collect ideas from community mem- bers about how to go forward in a post-affirmative action world, held the first in a series of forums yesterday to brain- storm ways to maintain diver- sity afternoon at the Medical School. University President Mary Sue Coleman established the Diversity Blueprints Task Force shortly after Proposal 2 passed in November. The task force, which is composed of students, faculty and commu- nity members, met for the first time on Dec. 19. The group will recommend strategies for maintaining diversity on campus in a pre- liminary report to Coleman on Feb.15. Afinal reportis due . to Coleman by March 15. An audience of task force members, faculty and a small number of students filled much of Sheldon Auditorium yesterday. After task force co-chair Teresa Sullivan introduced the event, speak- ers who signed up before the forum were each allotted five minutes to present their ideas about how to maintain a rela- tively diverse campus. Nine people stepped for- Alejandra Cruz, a member of By Any Means Necessary, stands at a podi- um in the Medical School last night and speaks about the effects of Prop- osition 2 in California, where she earned her undergraduate education. President Bush during his prime-time address from the White House last night. mass killings on an unimagi- Bush said. But he braced 12,000 more troops to secure nable scale." Americans to expect more Baghdad's neighborhoods - "If we increase our sup- U.S. casualties for now and and taking the lead in mili- port at this crucial moment did not specify how long the tary operations. and help the Iraqis break additional troops would stay. Even before Bush's the current cycle of violence, In addition to extra U.S. address, the new Democratic we can hasten the day our forces, the plan envisions leaders of Congress empha- troops begin coming home," Iraq's committing 10,000 to See BUSH , page 7A ward. The ethnically diverse speakers' included student activists and faculty mem- bers. The first speaker was Ale- jandra Cruz, a graduate from the University of California at Berkeley and an applicant to the University's Law School. Cruz, who is Latina, recount- ed her experience as a college student in California after affirmative action was banned there in 1996. "I saw how black and Lati- no students are treated with hostility - treated with more and more racism every year, because their numbers are so low," she said. LSA senior, a member of the student group Opera- tion Diversity, said her group wants to establish an annual week for celebrating diversity. She said the week could fea- ture activities like an evening of artistic expression includ- ing poetry readings and per- See TASK FORCE, page 7A TODAY'S H :46 WEATHER LO: 33 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail newsomichgandaily.com and let us know. SA LA RY SUPPL EMENT Find out how much your profs make: Look online for a list of 'U' salaries MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS................2A SPORTS..... Vol. CXVII, No. 74 sUDoKU..3A CLASS F IE ©2007The Michigan DailySU DN0 K N .. . ..4AR.T. michigandomly.com OPINION ..................d4A ARTS. .. ..5A 6A