) ) I I )- \ TN \ () IEA I IS( )I)1() A 111 Il )MAl Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, February 22, 2012 michigandaily.com LEGAL DISPUTE Board passes resolution decrying bill In emergency meeting, regents oppose bill barring GSRA unionization By PETER SHAHIN Daily Staff Reporter Even though none of the Uni- versity's regents were in the room, the tension was palpable. At a contentious 8 a.m. tele- conference meeting yesterday,, the University's Board of Regents met to consider a motion to state the body's opposition to pending legislation in the Michigan Sen- ate that would formally disqual- ify graduate student research assistants from classificajtion as public employees - render- ing them ineligible for unioniza- tion. The regents voted 6-2, in a party-line vote, in support of the motion. The Graduate Employ- ees' Organization is currently working within the Michigan Employment Relations Commis- sion's system to achieve a vote for GSRAs on unionization. Before the debate on wheth- er or not the motion would be approved by the board, Regents Andrea Fischer Newman (R- Ann Arbor) and Andrew Rich- ner (R-Grosse Pointe Park), the sole Republicans on the board, expressed their belief that the See BOARDPage 3A ALDEN REISS/Daily LSA senior Michelle Szewczyk, Kineseology junior Apolonia Theresa Rybicki, and Engineering junior Daniel Joseph Kalasinski, members of the University's Polish Club, sold paczkis doughnuts for Fat Tuesday yesterday in Mason Hall. L EG AL D IS PU TE Supreme Court to decide legality of race in college admissions OVe Bo Af to tI politi Supr revie tially 2003 that t ty of ions Th filed Texas admi Texa was q Justices could rejected due to her race. Texas public universities 2rturn landmark accept the top ten percent of each high school class in the Grutter v. state, then evaluate students below that level on other fac- llinger decision tors, including race. A federal district judge found By KATIE BURKE the University of Texas's admis- Daily Staff Reporter sion process to be constitution- al, leading to a series of appeals firmative action returned which eventually brought the he forefront of national case, Fisher v. University of cs yesterday as the U.S. Texas, to the Supreme Court. eme Court agreed to The court's ruling could w a case that could poten- affect public universities overturn the landmark nation-wide by reversing the case, Grutter v. Bollinger, 2003 Supreme Court's 5-4 deci- upheld the constitutionali- sion in Grutter v. Bollinger, using race in college admis- which decided that the Uni- versity Law School's admission e court will hear the suit process - providing minorities by Abigail Fisher, a white an advantage without using a s resident who was denied quota - was a constitutional ssion to the University of way to increase the diversity of s in 2008, claiming she incoming classes. ualified for acceptance but "The Law School engages in a highly individualized, holis- tic view of each applicant's file, giving serious consideration to all the ways an applicant might contribute to a diverse educa- tional environment," Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote in the majority opinion. Charles Shipan, political science professor and depart- ment chair, said it is likely the Supreme Court will agree with Fisher's claim because of the conservative voting history of the majority of the court's cur- rent judges. "Several of the judges in the Court right now, including (Jus- tice Clarence) Thomas and (Jus- tice Antonin) Scalia don't feel bound by precedent very much at all," Shipan said. According to Shipan, a ruling in favor of Fisher would affect public institutions that consid- er race in their evaluations of applicants. "If a school is currently say- ing that we take a holistic look ... they can no longer use race as one of the factors," Shipan said. Shipan added the ruling is not based solely on which side the court takes, but on how the decision is defined and justified. "(The Supreme Court) law- fully (has) a lot of leeway to make other sorts of decisions... whether they'll cast it very broadly and completely elimi- nate race from consideration, or whether they'll cast it more narrowly, and find some things about how Texas does it and strike that down," Shipan said. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said the Uni- versity will closely follow the case and its potential impact on public education, but the deci- sion may not change University admission policies. Proposal 2, a 2006 Michi- See SUPREME COURT, Page 3A SB 971 heads to frill Senate, Legislation would in favor and opposed to the bill, which was introduced by state classify GSRAs Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville (R-Monroe). The as students, not Republican-led committee voted 3-2 along party lines to send the bill to the Senate floor. The hearing and subse- By RAYZA GOLDSMITH quent vote on the bill came in DailyNewsEditor the immediate aftermath of an emergency meeting held Though it was only intro- by the University's Board of duced a week ago, Senate Bill Regents yesterday morning. At 971, which would legally classify the meeting, the regents voted graduate student research assis- 6-2 on a resolution expressing tants as students, barring them their opposition to the bill. The from unionizing, moved out of board also instructed Cynthia committee yesterday to the Sen- Wilbanks, the University's vice ate floor to be voted on. president for government rela- The Senate Government tions, to actively lobby against Operations committee heard the bill. testimony from individuals both See SENATE, Page 3A Vargas calls for immigration reform FROSTY READING In speech, He added that many people associate illegal immigration journalist with criminality, thus it was importanttocollectstories from discusses personal as many people as possible. "Undocumented immigrants experiences are just like everybody else, our parents, like the parents of By YOUNJOO SANG the country's first immigrants, Daily StaffReporter came to U.S. for a search of a better life like everyone in this Pulitzer Prize-winning jour- room," he said. "With or with- nalist Jose Antonio Vargas out proper documents, I'm a spoke yesterday about his life human too, and no human being as an undocumented immi- is illegal." grant and his desire to promote Kevin Mersol-Barg, founder discussion about immigration of the student organization through Define American, the Coalition for Tuition Equal- organization he founded. ity and the event's organizer, Before an overflowing crowd said the speech was intended at the Rackham Amphithe- to provide perspective on the ater last night, Vargas said he struggles undocumented stu- launched Define American to dents face. encourage conversation about The University restricts immigration and tell the stories undocumented students who of immigrants in the United live in Michigan from paying States through YouTube videos in-state tuition, forcing them modeled after the It Gets Better to pay the same rate as interna- campaign. tional students - three times LSA junior Kevin Binder gives a snowman a newspaper on the Diag. A NN A R rOR CITnY COUNCIt A2 Marathon to be run in June AUSTEt HUFFORD/Daily Jose Antonio Vargas spoke at the Rackham Ampitheatre last night. the amount an in-state student pays. Mersol-Barg said such poli- cies were pushing away talented students, and he said he wants to make the University acces- sible to all students. "It's not just a minority stu- dent issue, but an issue for all of us," he said. Vargas said he discovered he was an undocumented resident when he went to get his driver's permit when he turned 16 and was told his green card was fake. "I was thinkingto myself, the woman must be lying, because I'm not Mexican," Vargas said. "I was a victim of my own stereotype - I thought only Mexicans could be illegal immi- grants." See VARGAS, Page 3A a Council after the Ann Arbor City Council finalized plans for the marathon at unanimously their meetinglast night. The Ann Arbor Marathon will pproves event take place on Sunday, June 17 and money raised will benefit the Ann By STEVE ZOSKI Arbor Public Schools Educational Daily StaffReporter Foundation and Champions for Charity, the organization that June, the first-ever Ann supports the annual Big House marathon will join the list of Big Heart 5k, 10k and 1 mile race. events to take place in town See MARATHON, Page 6A This Arbor] unique WEATHER HI 47 GOTANEWSTIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILYCOM INDEX NEWS .........................2A CLASSIFIEDS ....A.....6A Call 734-418-411s ore-mail BET perpetuates sexism by banning music video Vol. CXXl, No. 99 OP IN ION..........4A SPOR T S.................7A TOMORROW LO: 34 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE FILTER ©20 TheMichigan Daily A R T S ............1 ti-A 0 I