4A - Monday, February 11, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com U4ie 0lidoi an a4 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu 0 ANDREW GROSSMAN EDITOR IN CHIEF GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR GABE NELSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. The Daily's public editor, Paul H. Johnson, acts as the readers' representative and takes a criticallook at coverage and content in every sectionof the paper. Readers are encouraged to contact the public editor with questions and comments. He can be reached at publiceditor@umich.edu. Anew legacy 'U' must end unfair preferences for children of alumni f the 55 questions on the first part of the University's 2008 undergraduate admissions application, there con- tinues to be at least one unnecessary and unfair question. It's question No. 30, and, no, it's not the optional question about an applicant's race and ethnicity. The question that has to go is the one about the whether an applicant has immediate family members who are University alumni. For a university that val- ues fairness and diversity, continuing to consider legacy status in admissions decisions and even keeping the question on the appli- cation sends the wrong message. Doesn't it seem as if Chelsea is sort of being pimped out in some weird sort of way?" - MSNBC correspondent David Shuster, commenting on Chelsea Clinton's increased participation in her mother, Hillary Clinton's, presidential campaign, on MSNBC's "Tucker" Thursday. WYMAN KHUU preiy You know I'm readng the subtitles too! excited to see SChiyo what are they siy Repubicans andyour tuition 0 At universities across the country, legacy considerations are the antithesis of equal opportunity. Designed with the purpose of reinforcing alumni relations and bolstering donations, the practice gives admissions preference to students with entrenched ties to the university they are hoping to attend. At many universities, the percep- tion - if not the practice - is that this pref- erence translates into a higher acceptance rate for privileged, white students. If an application is coupled with a big donation, that's even better. The University has claimed that things are different here. While the application asks about alumni relations, the answer is supposedly not given much weight and doesn't help pad the endowment. In the University's holistic-approach to consider- ing applicants, legacy is only one of hun- dreds of factors taken into consideration. Even when the University waa still: using the now-illegal points system, students only received up to four points for being a legacy. Considering that underrepresented minorities received 20 points and even Michigan residents received 10 points, this wasn't much of a boost. But here's the catch: No one can quan- tify how much being a legacy matters - the University doesn't collect the data. It has no incentive to keep this information either. If the University collected data, it would either find out that its question is deceptive and doesn't matter, or it would find out that it's supporting the old-boys-club stereotype of legacy preferences. It's a lose-lose situation. Ignorance isn't the only option, though. The University could do what it should have done decades ago and simply take the ques- tion off of the application. If the University is right and being a legacy doesn't influence decisions or increase donations, then it's a useless question that does more harm to the University's image than it does good. If the University is wrong and legacy sta- tus actually affects whether someone gets into the University or gives money, then continuing this practice is unquestionably despicable. Giving preference to appli- cants who have entrenched histories at the University is in exact opposition to the University's commitment to diversity and _the underlying argument that universities can provide social mobility for disadvan- taged groups. And if it's about money, no one should lose sleep if a few alumni who think they can buy admissions decisions stop donating. Having a parent that went to the Univer- sity may not guarantee a student's admise sion, but giving the impression that it may be a factor, even a minor one, is a deceitful practice. Question No. 30 needs to go. Both of the remaining Demo- cratic presidential candidates have specific plans to increase financial aid. The difference between - them is narrow, and if either is elected to the presidency students canexpect a more affordable tuition bill. Any student whose pri- mary concern is financial aid - and KARL there are many of STAMPFL you on campus - should support the Democrats. If you simply have to support a Republican and want one with an ambitious financial aid platform, there isn't a great option. John McCain is the overwhelming frontrunner in the Republican race, but is he the best for students' wallets? Except for some coded references to school vouchers, the education policy positions on his website are ghosts. Schools must be "account- able." We should hire "the most effec- tive, character-building teachers." As president, he will "pursue reforms." That's a sharp contrast from the Dem- ocrats, both of whom provide detailed proposals., McCain doesn't even mention higher education, let alone financial aid. The closest thing to a reference to college affordability is this statement: ' "He understands that we are a nation committed to equal opportunity, and there is notequal opportunity without equal access to excellent education." There's a tough stance. McCain's voting record on finan- cial aid is also abysmal. In July, for instance, he voted against H.R. 2669, which did things like limit monthly repayment bills to 15 percent of dis- cretionary income (good for students) and helped clean up subsidies to pri- vate lenders (good for students). The bill passed 78-18 in the Senate. Since Mitt Romney dropped out of the race last week, McCain has been attacked by the far right as not conser- vative enough. As he rushes to ingrati- ate himself with the right, expect him to try to seem more "fiscally respon- sible." College affordability isn't what Rush Limbaugh wants to hear about. Besides University of Florida President Bernie Machen - a former University of Michigan administra- tor - who for some peculiar reason endorsed McCain, the Arizona senator doesn't have much support in higher education. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, those who list higher education institutions as their employers have given $2.1 million to Barack Obama, $1.7 million to Hillary Clinton and only $228,000 to McCain. Maybe there's a better reason for that than liberal bias on campus. McCain, though, isn't the only Republican candidate still in the race. Mike Huckabee has vowed to hang on at least until McCain clinches the nomination, even though he doesn't really have much of a chance. Why? Because as he said on Saturday, he "didn't major in math. I majored in miracles, and I still believe in them, too." He has also said he doesn't believe in evolution. Those aren't the sentiments of someone you might expect to be a friend of higher education. But com- pared to McCain, he's the Ivory Tow- er's soul mate. The education policy page on his official website is more robust than McCain's, and for a Republican it's full of specifics about what he's done in the past and what he wants to do in the future. Unlike McCain, his poli- cies don't aggressively pander to the religious right's support of school vouchers. As governor of Arkansas, he has supported funding increases for the state's public universities to keep tuition down. In a 2005 State of the State address, Huckabee risked polit- ical backlash to tell the story of an illegal immigrant who was ineligible for financial aid. Then he supported 4 Surprise. They aren't that impressive. legislation to make in-state tuition rates and aid available to illegal immigrants. Those are the kind of risky, non- ideological stances students should be lookingfor. There's another Republican in the race, Ron Paul. He wants to eliminate the Department of Education, which is really all you need to know. Last week in this space I endorsed Obama as having better financial aid policies than Clintonby aslimmargin. There's a bigger difference between McCain and Huckabee, and Huckabee gets the nod for the GOP. Karl Stampfl was the Daily's fall/ winter editor in chief in 2007. He can be reached at kstampfl@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Emad Ansari, Anindya Bhadra, Kevin Bunkley, Ben Caleca, Satyajeet Deshmukh, Milly Dick, Mike Eber, Emmarie Huetteman, Theresa Kennelly, Emily Michels, Arikia Millikan, Kate Peabody, Robert Soave, lmran Syed, Neil Tambe, Matt Trecha, 'Kate Truesdell, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Rachel Wagner, Patrick Zabawa. TIM KUHN AND DORON YITZCHAKI One last chance for freedom SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU For several years, students in the Michi- gan Clinical Law Program -have been tak- ing turns trying to free Thomas Cress from a state penitentiary. Cress, a borderline- retarded father of three, has already served 22 years of a life sentence, without the possi- bility of parole, for the 1983 rape and murder of a Battle Creek teenager named Patricia Rosansky. Cress has steadfastlymaintained his inno- cence. There was no physical evidence link- ing Cress to the crime, and his confirmed alibi was never refuted at trial. He has taken end passed a polygraph test. Another man, a convicted rapist and mur- derer named Michael Ronning, has since confessed to the crime for which Cress was convicted. Ronning has been linked to similar crimes in numerous cities across the country, including two officially "unsolved" Battle Creek murders that occurred within months of Rosanky's. In 1992, the Battle Creek police chief asked the prosecutor who had won Cress's conviction to investigate the Ronning- gosansky connection. Tragically, the prose- cutor responded by ordering the destruction of DNA evidence that could have confirmed Ionning's guilt and exonerated Cress. The Michigan Clinical Law Program typically handles a wide variety of cases for clients who could not otherwise afford legal representation - everything from landlord- tenant issues to minor criminal offenses. But Cress is without a doubt the program's most high-profile client. His case received national attention when Dateline NBC ran an hour-long special about it roughly seven years ago. The Cress case has also inspired federal legislation. In 2004, Congress passed the Innocence Protection Act to prevent pros- ecutors from destroying DNA evidence after securing convictions. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), a sponsor of the act, specifically pointed to Cress as proof that the law was ,necessary. . In reference to Cress, Levin said: "It strikes me as an egregious violation of fun- damental fairness for a prosecutor, when told by experienced detectives that a man is in prison who they believe is innocent of a crime another man has confessed to, and that justice requires a new trial at which physical evidence under the prosecutor's control would-be highly relevant, to will- fully and purposefully burn that evidence." The clinic first became involved with the Cress case in 2003 when Prof. Bridget McCormack filed an amicus brief asking the Michigan Supreme Court to award Cress a new trial. After a new trial was denied, McCormack became Cress's attorney and filed a federal petition for habeas corpus. But in April the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied the petition, thus exhausting Cress's last judi- cial remedy. Cress's fate now rests on a grant of clem- ency. As Cress's latest student attorneys working under McCormack's supervision, we have been tasked with putting together a clemency petition that will reach Gov. Jenni- fer Granholm's desk before her term expires in January 2011. Although Granholm has not used her clemency power much to date, we are hopeful that she is seriously consid- ering meritorious petitions for clemency at this time. We want to distinguish Cress's petition from the thousands filed each year. Our goal is to create a multimedia clemency petition that will convince the parole board to rec- ommend Cress's release. For us to succeed, we need help. We are asking students, particularly those of you with experience producing films and designing websites as well as those of you with a strong interest in law or politics, to share your talents with us for the benefit of a man in need. Just showing that a diverse group of Uni- versity students has adopted Cress's cause may be enough to make all the difference. Tim Kuhn and Doron Yitzchaki are third-year law students and membersoft the Michigan Clinical Law Program. The wrong way to racial integration TO THE DAILY: In his recent column, Dave Mekelburg wrote the follow- ing about a racist Craigslist post: "Maybe people heard about it, but then something scary happened: they understood where the poster was coming from" (It's better than drinking alone, 02/08/2008). This is a mind-boggling suggestion. By Mekelburg's logic, we should indict the entire campus any time students fail to be outraged over a ridiculous online posting. I would like to suggest my own hypothetical. Maybe students on campus are smart enough to realize that at any time of day, on any day of the week, it is guaranteed that someone will be posting something offensive online. Taking these sorts of fringe comments seriously causes more discord, not less, and awards these comments a degree of unde- served importance. Instead ofexamininghis ownpref- erences, Mekelburg has decided that the reason he feels uncomfortable at bars is that the rest of the campus has a problem. If only campus were as integrated as, say, Baltimore, he feels we would be in abetter place. These cities have diverse neigh- borhoods, but they also have large sections that are starkly divided along racial lines. Even a pass- ing familiarity with Philadelphia's North Side or Baltimore's West Side would dispel the assertion that these cities are perfectly integrated and harmonious. It's disingenuous for Mekelburg to gloss over the real problems of race that confront these cities, while complaining that there are too many white people at an Ann Arbor bar. Mekelburg did have one good idea in his column, though. He should go to a different bar. I'm sure that all of the patrons at the Brown Jug will be happy to have one less person sneer- ing at them. Michael Saltsman Alum Nothing new about mistreating veterans TO THE DAILY: I was glad to read Ashlea Surles's column Friday about the substan- dard treatment of America's war veterans since the war against ter- rorism began. (Standing up for our soldiers, 02/08/2008). Unfortunate- ly, the substandard treatment of our war veterans has been an issue for our country since the Revolutionary War. In 1776, the Continental Congress enacted the first veterans' pension law. That law granted half pay for disabled veterans, but payment was left to state governments because the federal government didn't have the authority or funds to pay for these benefits. During the Great Depression, World War I veterans had to march on Washington D.C. to demand immediate payment of their service bonuses. After World War II, the federal government created the G.I. Bill of Rights. One of the benefits of the 1944 law paid for up to four years of education. However, Korean War veterans were not granted the same right. They only received pay- ment for a maximum of three years of education. These brief examples demonstrate the indifference that we, as a country, have shown veter- ans over our 232-year history. On Veterans Day each year, we do little to remember the sacrifices that our men and women have made. There are a few parades and ceremo- nies, but a lot of car sales, furniture sales and clearances. Do we actually pause and remember the sacrifice of these men and women? What did it cost us to have the right to stand up and say what we wish or read what we want? Maybe I have simplified the issue somewhat. But perhaps that is the key. It is a simple issue of respect and obligation to our veterans for our freedoms. Surles was on the mark, but the issue has been around for a lot longer than the present day. David Beurer Plant operations 'U' must compensate GSIs for their work TO THE DAILY: During the Jan. 31 talks between the Graduate Employees Organi- zation and the University admin- istration, University negotiators summarily rejected all of GEO's pro- posals for a new contract that fairly compensates the indispensable work of graduate student instructors. As a GSI and a member of the union, I am shocked by the University adminis- tration's arrogant and unapologetic response to the contract proposals that GEO put together after months of research and extensive surveys of GSIs. The University simply crossed out every single proposal and threw the proposals back across the table. The proposed changes were not unreasonable, though. One of the proposals called for a pay raise for GSIs that would meet the cost of living that the University's Office of Financial Aid says is required for a graduate student attending the University. At present, the major- ity of GSIs make $781 less than this amount, before taxes. Instead of agreeing to pay GSIs a living wage, the University administration pro- posed that GSI's take an effective pay cut in the new contract, leaving us even further below the rate of inflation and the cost of living. The University's negotiators are now sayingthat it does not recognize the validity of this number, which is calculated by the Office of Financial Aid and published on its website. The number is also used by the federal government to determine whether * students are eligible for financial aid. The University administration needs to remember that GSIs help run the University - we teach, grade and advise undergraduates, who bring the largest amount of money into this university. The university must not take this labor for granted. * Treat us with the respect that we deserve: Take our demands seriously and pay us a living wage. Stephen Sparks Rackham 4