C I. e Il~id~in Bail. Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, November 10, 2008] :om AFFIRMATIVE ACTION After Neb. ban, vocal advocate to press on, Colorado voted down proposal to end preferences in first blow to Connerly's campaign By NICOLE ABER Daily Staff Reporter Though the anti-affirmative action movement hit a snag last week when Colorado voters rejected a ballot initiative that would have banned the use of race- and gender-based preferences, but the movement's has vowed to keep the campaign alive by taking the issue to other states in the future. Colorado voters voted against Amendment 46 last week, 51 percent to 49 percent, making Colorado the first state in five tries to reject such a ballot initia- tive. But Ward Connerly, founder and chairman of the American Civil Rights Institute, a nonprofit organi- zation that leads the national anti-affirmative action- campaigns, said the defeat won't affect his plans down the line. He pointed to the fact that a similar initiative passed in Nebraska, making it the fourth state to ban the use of affirmative action. It joins Cali- fornia, Washington and Michigan. Connerly said he considered the Colorado loss an anomaly, pointing to the fact that Barack Obama, the first black presidential nominee of a major party, was on the ticket. He said Obama's candidacy drew an unusually large number of minority voters to the polls. "People were turning out to vote for Obama and against the initiative, and who otherwise would not be voting," Connerly said. "It was just a perfect storm that occurred, especially given the amount of money Obama put into the Colorado effort." Since Obama's historic victory last week to become the 44th president of the United States, Connerly has said Obama's election proves that affirmative action is no longer needed. In Nebraska, officials at public colleges and univer- sities are currently assessing how to comply with the amendment. Officials at the University of Michigan were in the same situation this time two years ago. See AFFIRMATIVE ACTION, Page 7A STUDENT-AT frfc tqADu to Favors for faculty questioned Audit shows profs on review board given free trips to bowl games By ANDY KROLL Daily News Editor As a member of the official party rep- resenting the University of Michigan at the 2007 Rose Bowl, Ross School of Business Prof. Thomas Kinnear spent the game mingling with California- based alumni, shaking hands and mak- ing introductions. He'd traveled to the Rose Bowl as a member of the University's Advisory Board on Intercollegiate Athletics, a group comprised of faculty, alumni, student-athletes and administrators whotogether advise UniversityAthletic Director Bill Martin on major financial and policy decisions involving Michi- gan athletics. As a faculty member on the ABIA, Kinnear also served on the board's Committee on Academic Performance (APC). The committee, made up of all the faculty members on the ABIA and one University administrator, reviews the academic performances of student- athletes whose grade point average drops below the University's required 2.0 and decides whether they are eli- gible to practice and compete in games. Though APC members make decisions in student-athlete eligibility cases, an internal University audit obtained by The Michigan Daily foundthattheAth- letic Department paid for seven of the 10 committee members to attend the 2007 Rose Bowl. The audit suggested that it "may appear to be a conflict of interest" for the Athletic Department to offer free airfare, hotel accommoda- tions, tickets and meals to the faculty members charged with overseeing the eligibility of the University's student- athletes. According to the July 2007 audit, the See FAVORS; Page 3A PROTECTING THE BROWN JUG: MICHIGAN 29, MINNESOTA 6 RODRIGO GAYA/ita Michigan football players hold up the Little Brown Jug trophy after their 29-6 win over Minnesota. The teams won't play again until 2011, meaning the second oldest trophy in college football will reside at the University of Michigan until then. For more on the football game and results from other sports, read SportsMonday, Page1B. LOCAL BUSINESS BTB unveils vegetable oil-powered taxi BUILDING A CLASS SCHEDULE Busy students question early athlete registration Offering $2 rides, burrito chain turns old fryer grease into promotional tool By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily StaffReporter BTB Burrito's newest market- ing device cruises the streets of Ann Arbor, seats 14 passengers and smells unmistakably like french fries. The Ann Arbor-based Mexi- can food chain has rolled out a red "party bus" that runs on vegetable oil and is offering the bus as an eco-friendly taxi. BTB co-owner Adam Lowenstein said converting the bus to run on vegetable oil took about three months and $4,000, but will pay dividends in the long run. "Basically, we don't pay for gas," he said. "We produce this waste product and we're paying to get it picked up. But now, for free, we're filtering and putting it into the bus and riding it around town." Anyone can call for a ride on the bus or flag it down from the street. A ride on the bus, which runs Tuesday through Saturday nights from 5 p.m. until about 3 a.m., costs $2. Lowenstein said students can also rent out the bus for a ride to concerts or other events outside Ann Arbor. Rishi Narayan, who owns Underground Printing and has a stake in the bus project, said he and BTB co-owner Justin Her- rick have long wanted to cre- ate an environmentally-friendly kind of transportation. But using the remnants of tortilla chips to power the bus has some conse- quences, he said. "We're running the bus on used fryer grease," he said. "It smells a little bit like french fries if you're standing behind it." Benny Thomas Blevins, the bus's driver, said most of the calls for the bus come before midnight. While he tries to pick people up immediately, he said during busy periods it can be hard to keep track of all the requests. It usually takes between 15 and 20 minutes See PARTY BUS, Page 7A Student-athletes will have first pick of classes next semester By TREVOR CALERO Daily StaffReporter LSA sophomore Lee Collins, an Army ROTC cadet, wakes up before sunrise three days a week for physical training, leadership training and infantry tactics and land navigation. But despite his busy schedule, Collins receives no help from the University when it comes to reg- istration. He struggles to craft a schedule along with the rest of the student body. That is, except for student-ath- letes. Under a new policy that goes into affect this upcoming term, athletes will receive priority over non-athletes when registering for classes, drawing criticism from other students who struggle to reconcile coursework with busy extracurricular schedules. Collins said the new policy is unfair to people like himself. "There are so many people who are working very hard, paying their way through college, there is no special consideration for them," Collins said. "(The policy is) basically saying that the athletic department is a step ahead of the rest of the school." Medical School Prof. Charles Koopmann, a member of the Sen- ate Advisory Committee on Uni- versity Affairs, the faculty's main governing body, said athletes run into many issues with scheduling because of their practice sched- ules. SACUAunanimously passed a resolution in support of the policy. Koopmann said in an e-mail that SACUA had heard of many athletes who were forced to change from rigorous courses of study to alter- native routes because they had difficulty registering for required classes. Fridays are typically travel days for athletes, which often forces them to miss class, he said. "Not all professors at U-M will See REGISTRATION, Page 7A MAX COLLINS/Daily BTB co-owner Adam Lowenstein stands beside the new BTB Party Bus, which seats * 14. The bus, which costs $2 a ride, runs on used vegetable oil from fryers. WEATHER HI: 46 TOMORROW LU: 31 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS Who's on the National Council of Arts? THEFILTER.BLOGS.MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEW S ................................ 2A ARTS. . ................. .............5A Vol. CXIX, No. 48 SUDOKU..............3A CLASSIFIED.,............6A 0200ttTheMchiganDaily OPINION...........................4A SPORTSMONDAY..t..... .....1B michigondaily.com