Clooney makes 'Michael Clayton' matter Arts, page 5 Ie 1Eidigau Daij . Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, October 19,2007 michigandaily.com FROM SOLDiERS TO STUDETS AFTER PROPOSAL 2 'U' considers a veterans affairs office Alumni Vets face difficulty when applying for admission, financial aid By GABE NELSON Daily News Editor After lobbying by student veterans, the University is "strongly consider- ing" creating a position that would help veterans with the unique problems they face with admissions and financial aid, said Lester Monts, the University's senior vice provost for academic affairs, in an interview yesterday. That's one of several changes being proposed by a group called the Student Veterans Association of the University of Michigan. The group, formed this year by LSA junior and six-year Air Force veteran Derek Blumke, has also asked the University to give college credit to veterans for military expe- rience and offer all veterans in-state tuition. Blumke said the hiring of a veterans coordinator would be a good first step to making the transition to the Univer- sity easier for veterans. "It is great that Dr. Monts and the University of Michigan are making progress to improve these programs," he said. "It shows veterans outside the University and people in the military that the University of Michigan is a welcoming place for veterans." Monts said he is discussing several other programs for veterans, but he wouldn't discuss any other plans being considered. He said he has discussed the matter with officials from the offices of Undergraduate Admissions, Financial Aid, New Student Programs and Academic Multicultural Initiatives and plans to schedule a meetingso they can decide which policies to imple- ment. "We're looking at several answers," Monts said. "It's going to take some time." Blumke said veterans need help from a dedicated official when filling See VETERANS, page 7 Assoc. to give aid to minorities Association says it's legal for it to do what 'U' cannot By CHRIS HERRING Daily News Editor The Alumni Association of the University of Michi- gan plans to hand out scholarships based on race and gender by next fall, Alumni Association President Steve Grafton said yesterday. Grafton said board members met yesterday to plan the implementation of the scholarship program. The group's board set aside $650,000 for scholarships at a meeting last month and hopes to offer the first set of scholarships to students entering the University in September. Grafton said the scholarships are intended to limit the effect of Proposal 2, which banned the use of affir- mative action in Michigan. But exactly how the scholarships will be awarded is yet to be decided. Grafton said the board hopes to figure that out within the next three weeks. The alumni association sent a board member to the University of Texas to ask for advice from Texas alum- ni. Texas Exes, a group for former University of Texas students, implemented a similar scholarship plan after affirmative action was banned there in 1996. "We've got a thousand questions as to how it's going to work exactly," he said. When board members first discussed starting an additional scholarship fund after Proposal 2 passed in November, Grafton first had to determine whether the alumni association could legally award the schol- arships. The alumni association is a private 501(c)3 orga- nization, which entitles it to raise funds separately from the University. However, the group calls itself "a committed partner of the University" in its mission statement, which has raised questions about whether it is legally affiliated with the University and bound by Proposal 2. Grafton said the alumni association hired a law firm to make sure the group's efforts weren't against the law. "It's legal," Grafton said. "What passed in the state in no way prohibits people contributing to the alumni association." Maya Kobersy, an assistant University general counsel, said the alumni association decided to offer the scholarships independent of the University. "To my knowledge, the University wasn't involved in the decision at all," Kobersy said. "We learned about it when the alumni association's board reached its determination this summer." Some people might be reluctant to donate to the alumni association because the plan could be seen as undermining the spirit of Proposal 2. Grafton said he expects some to react that way, See ALUMNI, page 7 University Organist Marilyn Mason, who has been at the University since 1944, was the first ferale organist to play at Westminster Abbey. 60 YEARS BEHIND THE KEYS Mason has been chair of Organ Department since 1960 By MAUREEN SULLIVAN DailyArts Writer The first time University Organist Marilyn Mason stepped onto Hill Audi- torium's stage was in 1944 as a transfer student. Back then, Mason likened the grandiose auditorium to her "private studio." This year, as Mason celebrates her 60th year on the University's faculty - making her the longest-serving pro- fessor in University history - her per- formances at the auditorium really do make it seem like her own. In her 60 years, Mason, or Madame, as she prefers her students call her, has used her experience and her self- described "critical but sympathetic, informative but understanding" teach- ing style to help elevate the University organ department to world-renowned status. Mason has been chair of the Depart- ment of Organ since 1960 and the Uni- versity organist - playing University functions - since 1976. She is the first female organist to be invited to play at Westminster Abbey, the first female organist to play in Latin America and the first American organist to perform in Egypt. Mason has inspired countless in her travels with her passion and profession- alism. Associate Organ Prof. Michele Johns recalled in an e-mail interview watching Mason play when Johns was a student at Northwestern. "I thought, 'Wow! A woman can be an organist, not just men.' She's been my idol ever since," Johns said. Earlier this month, six of MIason's former students, with graduation years ranging from 1971to 2007, played organ compositions to pay tribute to their professor. Standing on that familiar Hill stage to deliver a short speech of thanks, Mason looked like she was at home. Mason's anniversary coincided with the University's 47th annual Con- ference on Organ Music, which she founded. This year's conference was See ORGANIST, page 7 INCREASING DIVERSITY Students travel to find Prop 2 panacea 'U' sends groups to Texas, California and Washington By EMILY BARTON Daily StaffReporter Twelve University of Michigan students flew to California, Texas and Washington over Fall Break to investigate ways to prevent a drop in underrepresented minority enrollment after the statewide ban on affirmative action. Like the University of Michigan, public universities in those three states are prohibited by law from using affirmative action in admis- sions and financial aid. Michigan's affirmative action ban - passed by state voters in November - went into effect in December of last year. Administrators from the Uni- versity of California at Los Angeles and at Berkeley, the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Washington at Seattle came to Ann Arbor in December to talk to University of Michigan adminis- trators about dealing with affirma- tive action bans. John Matlock, the director of the University's Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives, said the only thing missing from that dia- logue was a student perspective, which is why they sent groups made up of three students and a faculty member to each of the four universities over break. The provost's office funded the trip. A committee working on other diversity plans selected the stu- dents for the trip. There is a fifth group that will be conducting the same kind of inter- See TRAVEL, page 7 Solar car team preps for race across Outback Team aims for first win at Australia competition By RYAN A. PODGES Daily Staff Writer The Michigan Solar Car Team has spent two years designing and building Continuum, its latest vehicle. Starting Sunday, the group will have five days to prove that its car is the best in the world. The team's race crew is now in Australia, preparing for the bien- nial Panasonic World Solar Chal- lenge, a trek across 1,864 miles of Australian Outback roads. The race is scheduled to begin Sunday in Darwin, a city on the country's - northern coast, and expected to 'w finish five days later in Adelaide, a' city on the southern coast. This year's competition is the Michigan team's sixth attempt. The team has finished as high as third COURTESY OF MICHIGAN SOLAR CAR TEAM three times, including in 2005, the The University of Michigan Solar Car team has spent two years designing and building Continuum, which the team will race See SOLAR CAR, page 7 across the Australian Outback beginning on Sunday. TODAY'S HI: 67 WEATHER LO: 48 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS Between A2 and Raleigh, a streetlight battle MICH IGANDAI LY.COM/THE WIRE INDEX NEWS.... . . . 2 CROSSWORD...................6 Vol. CXVII, No. 32 OPIN ON .............................4 CLASSIFIEDS .. . ..........6 ©2007TheMichigan Daily ARTS.. . . .. SPORTS. . . ..........8 michigandaily.com *