The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com Thursday, March 8, 2012 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycomThursday, March 8, 2012 - 5A PROPOSAL 2 From Page 1A Supreme Court upheld the Univer- sity's admissions policy that con- sidered race in the holistic review of an applicant. Rather, the case examined whether an applicant's presentation of his or her racial background can be considered in their application. Rosenbaum said the execution of Proposal2 in Michigan is a form of inequity, and the case was mon- umental as a civil rights hearing. "In 2012, the way to discrimi- nate is to take off the table racial topics," Rosenbaum said. "It's to say we cannot have advocacy - pro or con - about racial topics." BAMN national coordinator Donna Stern said in a press release yesterday that the consequences of Proposal 2 are profound for racial minorities in Michigan. "Prop 2 has already sharply reduced opportunities for tal- ented young black, Latino and Native-American students to become doctors, lawyers, engi- neers, professors and other lead- ers," Stern said in the release. "It is leading to a new form of Jim Crow - separate and unequal - in our nation." African-American enrollment at the University has decreased by 15 percent from 2006 to 2010. Enrollment in the University Law School has declined by 28 percent, according to the release. Reverend Wendell Anthony, president of the NAACP's Detroit branch, said, in the BAMN press release that the current stance on race in the admissions process is detrimental to the state's higher education system. "Proposal 2 treats those who value equal opportunity unfairly, diminishing the quality of our sys- tem ofhigher education," Anthony said. In an article published yester- day in the Detroit News, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said the ban on affirmative action is rooted in constitutional values of equality. "Ourtcitizens approved an amendment to ensure everyone has equal opportunity under the law," Schuette told the News, pledging to defend the amend- ment in court. Jennifer Gratz - awoman from Southgate, Mich. who successfully sued the University in 1997 for its former admissions process that gave points based on racial back- ground, and was ruled unconstitu- tional by the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2003 case Gratz v. Bollinger - told the News that she thinks the ban will be upheld. "I believe that court will move swiftly to reverse the three-panel decision and uphold the will of the voters of Michigan," Gratz said. Gratz said the ban against affir- mative action has strong legal standing. "There isn't a legal scholar that I have spoken with that has indi- cated that the ruling was faulty," Gratz said, according to the News. "It takes way too much mental gymnastics to saythat ending race preferences is discriminatory and I believe that ruling was extreme- ly faulty." The University, which is a named defendant in the case, declined to comment on the appeal. SUPREME COURT From Page 1A a commitment to integrity," McCormack said. "I would have in mind all of the work I've done on behalf of clients over the years trying to get justice." McCormack has received a number of awards during her time at the University, including the Detroit & Michigan National Lawyers Guild Award in 2012, the Patriot Award from the Washtenaw County Bar Asso- ciation in 2011 and the Justice for All Award from the Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan in 2010. She has also run clinics dealing with general litigation, domestic violence and ethics in order to provide practical experience for students in the Law School. In 2009, McCormack founded the Michigan Innocence Clinic, which uses non-DNA evidence to prove wrongful accusations of individuals convicted in Michigan courts. The Clinic has worked to exonerate five sus- pects in its three years of exis- tence. McCormack said the clinic is intended to provide justice and public security when the justice system is unable to do so. "One of the hopes of the work of the clinic is to show the ways in which - when the justice sys- tem gets it wrong - communities are less safe and none of us are better off," McCormack said. Kimberly Thomas, a clinical professor of law, said if elected, McCormack's presence will be greatly missed at the University since she would have to resign from her position to remain impartial as a justice. "(McCormack) puts anempha- sis on getting students to look hard and think for themselves," Thomas said. "She has made a positive impact on the faculty." Paul Reingold, a clinical pro- fessor of law, said McCormack's persistence and ambition are valuable assets in her campaign. "She has worked very hard to get the nomination. If she gets it, her hard work will pay off, and it will give her a leg up in the cam- paign," Reingold said. Law School student Jus- tin Benson wrote in an e-mail interview that McCormack would provide useful insight and knowledge to the Court. "Given that she is co-director of the Innocence Clinic, I believe that she may bring a perspective to the bench that I believe is lack- ing," Benson wrote. WANT TO WORK IN THIS OLD BUILDING? Military leader talks " of risk for U.S. in Syria Defense Secretary warns against involvement in unrest WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary Leon Panet- ta pushed back on Wednesday against fresh demands for U.S. military involvement in Syria to end President Bashar Assad's deadly crackdown on his people. "What doesn't make sense is to take unilateral action right now," Panetta told the Senate Armed Services Committee about advising President Barack Obama to dispatch U.S. forces. "I've got to make very sure we know what the mission is ... achieving that mission at what price." The panel's top Republican, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, said the estimated 7,500 dead and the bloodshed calls for U.S. leadership that a Democratic president, Bill Clinton, dis- played during the Bosnian war in the 1990s and that Obama eventually showed on Libya last year. "In past situations, America has led. We're not leading, Mr. Secretary," McCaintold Panetta. The Pentagon chief later added that the United States is not holding back and is leading in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and the war on terrorism. Testifying before the commit- FOLLOW * THE DAILY ON TWITTER * @MICHIGANDAILY @MICHDAILYSPORTS @MICHDAILYNEWS @MICHDAILYOPED @MICHDAILYARTS @MICHDAILYPHOTO @MICHDAILYDESIGN tee, Army Gen. Martin Dempsey sibility of military action, say- and Panetta offered a caution- ing the Obama administration ary note to the call by McCain continues to assess the situation to launch U.S. airstrikes against and would adjust its strategy as Assad's regime. necessary. "This terrible situation has no Dempsey said among the mil- simple answers," Panetta told itary options are enforcement the panel. of a no-fly zone and humanitar- Obama has resisted calls to ian relief. He said a long-term, step into the turmoil in Syria sustained air campaign would to stop Assad's crackdown pose a challenge because Syria's on protesters. He told a news air defenses are five times more conference Tuesday that the sophisticated than Libya's. He international community has said Syria's chemical and bio- not been able to muster a cam- logical weapons stockpile is 100 paign against Syria like the one times larger than Libya's. in Libya that ousted Moammar "We also need to be alert to Gadhafi last year. extremists, who may return "For us to take military action to well-trod ratlines running unilaterally, as some have sug- through Damascus, and other gested, or to think that somehow hostile actors, including Iran, there is some simple solution, I which has been exploiting the think is a mistake," Obama said. situation and expanding its sup- "What happened in Libya was port to the regime," Dempsey we mobilized the international said. "And we need to be espe- community, had a U.N. Security cially alert to the fate of Syria's Council mandate, had the full chemical and biological weap- cooperation of the region, Arab ons. They need to stay exactly states, and we knew that we where they are." could execute very effectively in McCain, along with Sens. a relatively short period of time. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and This is a much more complicat- Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., have ed situation." called for U.S. military involve- Obama's strategy has been to ment. But the issue has divid- use sanctions and international ed Republicans, with House diplomatic isolation to pressure Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, Assad into handing over power. insisting on Tuesday that the The Pentagon chief said situation is too muddled and the United States is currently U.S. military involvement would focused on isolating the Assad be premature. regime diplomatically and polit- Committee Chairman Carl ically, arguing that it has lost all Levin, D-Mich., said there is no legitimacy for killing its own consensus on how to get Assad people. He left open the pos- to leave. 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