THE STATEMENT WOMEN'S HOOPS Illegal immigrant workers struggle to make ends meet while With NIT bid, Michigan's first working toward a college degree. postseason tourney in six years &711d11gan aily Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, March 19,2008 michigandailycom FIXING THE FISH AFFIRMATIVE ACTION Federal court judge upholds Proposal 2 Pro-affirmative action group plans to appeal ruling ByMATTAARONSON and JULIE ROWE Daily StaffReporters A federal court judge dismissed yesterday in a lawsuit looking to overturn Proposal 2, a ballot ini- tiative which banned the use of race- and gender-based affirma- tive action at public institutions in the state of Michigan in Nov. 2006. The case, Cantrell v. Gran- holm, was filed by several high school and college students who claim the ban is unconstitutional because it goes against the equal protection clause of the U.S. Con- stitution. The plaintiffs, including the pro-affirmative action group By Any Means Necessary, argued that Michigan colleges should be allowed to consider race and gen- der in admissions decisions. LSA junior Maricruz Lopez, co-chair of BAMN and a vice pres- idential candidate for the Defend Affirmative Action Party in the Michigan Student Assembly elec- tions taking place today and tomorrow, said she was distraught when she heard the news. "This is definitely disappoint- ing, and to me it's very offensive," Lopez said. She said she was "100 percent confident" the ban will ultimately be overturned, saying it could go to the nation's highest court. "We are anticipating that we're going to end up all the way at the U.S. Supreme Court with this case because it's so important," Lopez said. "We're not going to accept having segregated campuses and we're not going to accept having second-class treatment anymore." BAMN attorney George Wash- ington said the group plans to file an appeal today. "We think it's an outrageous See PROPOSAL 2, Page 3A ROB MIGRIN/Daily Ray Fisher Stadium, home of the Michigan baseball team, is still undergoing renovations with the home baseball season scheduled to start this week. The first game in the renovated Fish was scheduled for today, but it was cancelled due to rain. Coach Rich Maloney said the construction wasn't a factor. FOR MORE, SEE SPORTS, PAGE 8A ANN A RBOR DEVELOPMENT Plan for student high-rise tabled amid outcry from landlords, locals Upscale apartment building would house 1,400 residents By KELLY FRASER Daily News Editor Plans for University Village, a proposed near-campus high-rise marketed toward students, were delayed last night because of con- cerns from city officials and resi- dents about the building's size. The Ann Arbor Planning Com- mission - a board that reviews planned developments in the city - voted at its meeting to table the proposal submitted by the apart- ment complex's developers until its concerns are addressed. The plans will now go back to citystaffers,who will work with the developer to revise the proposal for the complex, to be built on the cor- ner of South Forest and South Uni- versityAvenues. As proposed, University Vil- lage would be comprised of two L-shaped towers, one standing 15 stories high and the other standing 22 stories high. The complex would house about 1,400 residents in about 400 units about would include about 500 parkingspaces. More than a dozen Ann Arbor residents who live near the build- ing's proposed site spoke against the project during the meeting. They voiced concerns about the height and the scale of the complex, the added congestion and traffic it would bring and whether there is sufficient demand for luxury stu- dent housing to fill the complex. Many speakers said they feared the towers' height would dwarf the surroundingneighborhoods. "I would urge you to throw it out the door," said Bart Fisher, an Ann Arbor resident and landlord. "It's absurd." Dan Ketelaar of Omena Real Estate and Investment, L.L.C., one of the project's developers, declined to comment on the concerns raised at the meeting. Ketelaar, the only person to speak in support of the project, told the commission he understood the decision to table the proposal and said more of the project's represen- tatives would attend future discus- sions. Kathy Sample, a co-chair of the North Burns Park Association, said the development would add too much traffic to the block and does not add enough parking to the area to accommodate the add residents. "Not to mention the pizza deliv- ery," said added. Ann Arbor landlord William Copi said he feared the complex would weaken the market for surrounding student rental. "The University is not adding 1,400 people to enrollment just so these people can fill up University Village," Copi said. "It will come from rental properties that consti- tute the neighborhoods stretch- ing down State and Hill and other streets. When these houses become marginalized as rental properties in a down housing market you may end up with vacancies in droves." Burns Park resident Andrea Van- Houweling also questioned wheth- er the amenities University Village advertises were necessary. "I think we need affordable hous- ing for students, not luxury hous- ing," she said. Planning Commission Chair Evan Pratt said that while Com- mission members often question a developer's 'intent or whether the market can support a proposed proj- ect, it isn't within the commission's role to make judgments on these matters. "Our role here is to determine if the proposal meets the ordinance," he said. The project also came under fire during a public meeting earlier this month when residents aired many of the same grievances. The complex, which developers hope will be completed by 2010, would be constructed in two phases over several years. The project is advertised as upscale student hous- ing, offering amenities like retail space on the first floor, a washer and dryer in every unit and staff on every floor - similar to resident advisors in residence halls. THE NATION'S ECONOMY Union leader: U.S. late to take economic action AFL-CIO official pushes for policies that help middle class ByIVYWEI For theDaily Richard Trumka, an executive in the nation's largest labor union, said the country's economic infra- structure is failing the working class and is to blame for the grow- ing wealth gap in America during a talk yesterday in the Michigan Union. Addressing about 40 people, Trumka, the secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organization, better known as the AFL-CIO, said people are only now stepping back to examine the nation's poor economic situation. "It takes the collapse of the housing industry, the subprime mortgage crisis, and a15-percent plunge in the stock market to get the nation's attention," said Trum- ka intheUnion'sPendletonRoom. He added that the nation has been "growing apart economical- ly, politically, and socially for the past 30 years." To avoid wage stagflation, job losses, eroding health care ben- efits and decreasing pensions, middle-class Americans must now work more jobs with longer hours in order, Trumka said. See TRUMKA, Page 3A MSA PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES Known to stand up for others, DAAP's Stenvig battles for self Stenvig hopes to fight inequality at the University By MIKE DOLSEN For the Daily Ever since she was a child, Kate Stenvig has noticed the race and gen- der discrimination of society. Now, as a Rackam Graduate student, Stenvig sees many of the same problems at the Uni- versity. After the Michigan Student Assembly's elections, taking place today and tomor- row, Stenvig hopes to be in a better posi- tion to address those issues. Stenvig. running for president of MSA on the Defend Affirmative Action Party ticket, said she feels compelled to stand up for groups that have been oppressed throughout history. SAID ALSALAH/Daily See STENVIG, Page 7A For MAP's Shingwani, image and transparency are everything Funding student groups excites' MAP candidate By DANIEL STRAUSS Daily Staff Reporter For most students, one of Michigan Student Assembly presidential candidate Sabrina Shingwani's interests probably seems a bit strange. "Funding really excites me," she said. "As boring as that sounds." Currently serving as MSA treasurer 4 and as a sociology major with a sub- concentration in economics, business and society - the LSA junior explained that she likes to see students' events come together from beginning to end. "Seeing them from scratch, and then seeing the event completed and done and when everyone came to it, that's kind of MSA ELECTIONS 101 STonaote guto: vote.umich.edu/ Polls for the Michigan Student Assembly and student government electionsopened at midnight and close tomorrow at 11:55 p.m. Students may vote in elections for the college or school in which they are enrolled and for their college representative in MSA and the MSA presidential elections. Half of the assembly's 52 elected seats are up for election. Students may write in candidates on the ballots. See SHINGWANI, Page 7A RuoIGuOnYA/oaiy WEATHER HI:40 GOTANEWSTIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail TOMORROW L 22 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS MSA passes anti-spam resolution MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/TH EWIRE INDEX NEWS................................2A Vol. CXVI1, No.k116 OPINION ...........................4A (02008TheMichigan Daily ARTS .................................5A michigandaily.com CLASSIFIEDS......................6A SPORTS .........................6A THE STATEMENT..................1B 4