46F 4$r 46F Illic i an l A , r - b .. o . r, .,. M '. i , c I h . i g - a - n Thursday, December 10,2009 michigandaily.com CONSTRUCTING CAMPUS " Ally. General investigating company in N. Quad build THE LAST DANCE After worker death, Michigan's attorney general looking into subcontractor By DAVID TAYLOR For the Daily The masonry company cur- rently working on the North Quad residential and academic complex is under criminal investigation by the State Attorney General's office, according to an official from the Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administra- tion. The Attorney General's office is currently reviewing the Fehru- ary 2008 on-site death at the Uni- versity of Michigan Museum of Art, of.3-y3ear-old Leo Felty, Jr., a -worker for the subcontractor Davenport Masonry, Inc. Felty, a Pinckney, Mich. native, fell from scaffolding last February while working on the $42-million addition to UMMA. He was nearly 40 feet from the ground when he stepped back- wards off of his scaffold, which, according MIOSHA construction safety standards, should have had a guardrail installed on all open sides. He died on impact, officials confirmed. In response, MIOSHA cited Davenport Masonry for four sep- arate violations of construction safety standards, totaling $61,600 in fines. Three of those were clas- sified as "willful violations," the most serious form of OSHA cita- tions. Davenport Masonry has appealed the citations, according to MIOSHA Construction Safety and Health Division Director Bob Pawlowski. The gravity of citations classi- fied as "willful" merit automatic referral to the Michigan Attorney General's office, Pawlowski said. "When we issue willful vio- lations, as we did in this case, they're directly associated with a fatality," Pawlowski said.,"This means that an employer knew of certain rules, and consciously ignored them ... We are required by law to send it to the criminal division of the Attorney General's office." The Office of the Attorney General is "currently reviewing to determine whether or not they See INVESTIGATION, Page 8A 5AMANTHA TRAUBEN/Daily The Asian Pacific Islander Studies program showcased students hula dancing to celebrate the end of the semester. The performance was the culmination of a semester of work in a class taught by Associate Prof. Amy Stillman. U N DER RE PR ES E NTE D M IN O R ITY E N RO L M ENIT Detroit educators respond to ColeOman' ,sd "-Irec4OA,1ruit ment efforts Officials: President's pitch may push more students to apply By MALLORY BEBERMAN Daily StaffReporter Though the number of underrep- resented minority students enrolled at the University is decreasing, edu- cators working in Detroit Public Schools said University President Mary Sue Coleman's trips to the city's schools may be helping to change that. For every year since the passage of a state constitutional amendment in 2006 that banned the use of race- based affirmative action, the num- her of underrepresented minority students enrolled at the University has declined. According to data released by the University in Octo- ber, underrepresented minority freshman enrollment is down 11.4 percent from last year. in an effort to curb this decrease, Coleman has been traveling to Detroit and speaking to students in hopes of encouraging them to consider the University as a viable post-high school option. in a series of interviews over the last several weeks, many Detroit educators said the tactic is a practical solution to stem the underrepresented minor- ity enrollment declines. In October, Coleman spoke to hundreds of Detroit educators at the 2009 Wolverine Outreach Workshop reception, which aimed to inspire See DETROIT, Page 3A TALKING ABOUT A REVOLUTION STUDYING IN THE STATES In line with national trend, more Chinese coming to'U' JAKE FROMM/Daily The full story on the Daily's news blogRomanian poet Andrei Codrescu, who is also a commentator for National hat hegt ailye/b logs/h wre.Public Radio, speaks at Rackham Auditorium last night about the execution atmichigardaifycom/hlogs/the wire. W I 20 years ago of Romania's dictator and the country's ensuing revolution. SOUT H U. BLAZE Hearing postponed one week for suspect in abandoned building fire Ex] risi in d A r numb stude colleg versit espec A USA nese enroll ties i the c Chine gradu at U.S 2009 that r nation China signif increi demic nese s the U At officio that t true I reasoi perts say China's population on campus. According to the University's ing middle class, International Center's 2009 sta- tistical report, the number of creased wealth Chinese students enrolled at the . Universityhasseena105-percent riving the rise increase in the last 10 years, from 600 in the 1999-2000 academic By ALLIE WHITE year to 1,227 in 2008-2009. Daily StaffReporter Even this past year has a seen - a significant rise in enrollment new report shows that the with an additional 227 Chinese 'er of Chinese international students than the 2007-2008 nts attending United States academic year. Yes is on the rise - and Uni- Though the University's y officials say the trend is international reputation for aca- ially true at the University. demic excellence is a key aspect Dec. 8 article published by in attracting Chinese students, Today reported that Chi- there are other factors at work as college students have been well, officials said. ling at American universi- Miranda Brown, associate n record numbers. Across professor of Asian languages and ountry, a total of 98,510 culture, cited increased wealth rse graduate and under- and the development of a middle ate students were enrolled class in China as major reasons . institutions in the 2008- for the surge in students. academic year, meaning Mentioning the one-child pol- oughly 15 percent of inter- icy implemented by the Chinese nal students were from government in 1979 - the popu- . These numbers also lation control plan that restricts y a staggering 60 percent the number of children married ase from the previous aca- urban couples can have to one, if year in the number of Chi- the family wishes to receive full tudents studying abroad in government benefits - Brown nited States, said it is now easier for parents the University of Michigan, to afford an overseas education als told The Michigan Daily for their children. he same trend is holding "There's a lotmoremoney than tere and pointed to several there used to be," Brown said. "A ns for the growing Chinese lot of middle-class families want BY THE NUMBERS Increases in number of Chinese stu- dents studying at American colleges 98,510 Numberof Chinese students studying in the U.S. in 2008-2009 Percentage increase from 2007-2008 to 2008-2009 academic year in the numberof Chinese students studyingin the U.S. 1,F227 Number of Chinese students studying at the University in2008-2009 1105% ' Percentage increase in the number of Chinese students studying at the University overtthe last10 years. SOURCES: USA Today, International Center 2009 Statistical Report the best for their kids, and they only have one, so they're able to concentrate all their resources on that child." Echoing a similar sentiment, Mary Gallagher, director of the University's Center for Chi- nese Studies, wrote in an e-mail interview that education in See CHINA, Page 3A Justin Arens's petition to decrease his bond denied by judge By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily News Editor Justin Arens, one of the sus- pects arrested in connection with WE AT HE R HI: 25 TOMORROW LU 17 the blaze at the former location of Pinball Pete last month, appeared in Washtenaw County Court today to postpone his preliminary hearing until Dec. 16 to allow for additional investigation. His lawyer also petitioned for Arens's family to post 10 per- cent of his $100,000 bond, but the petition was denied by Judge Chris Easthope. Arens asked to decrease the bond so he could be released to live with his family in Romulus, Mich. Members of Arens's family, including his mother, watched the proceedings. Arens has been charged with arson of personal property in connection with the Oct. 24 fire that ravaged the South Univer- sity Avenue landmark. The fire displaced about 600 students that night who were living in the Uni- versity Towers apartment com- See HEARING, Page 8A GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news(michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM See the dangers of sports fanaticism in "Big Fan." MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE FILTER INDEX NEWS................2A SPORTS....................5A Vol. CXX, No.64 SyDOKU................... .....3A CLASSIFIEDS...........A.....6A (Q009TheMichiganDaly OPIN10 N ...................4A THE B-SIDE ......................t.1B irichigandaity cow P