The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, April 1, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS GREEN BAY, Wisc. Water levels in Great Lakes bad news for shippers Water levels on the Great Lakes are so low that shippers are being forced to leave as much as 15 percent of their cargo behind, said industry experts who are working to find ways to alleviate the problem. Lakes Michigan and Huron are about 26 inches below their long-term monthly averages, and Lake Superior is about 13 inches lower, the U.S Army Corps of Engineers has said. Even though the lakes are expected to rise 2 to 4 inches in the next month, that's small consolation for shippers who are finding the waterways difficult to navigate. So officials gathered this week in Green Bay to discuss the issue and considersolutions, the Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. ANCHORAGE, Alas. Alaska Troopers helicopter crashes 0 during rescue An Alaska State Trooper heli- copter carrying two troopers and a rescued snowmobiler crashed Saturday night in the south-cen- tral part of the state, and no sur- vivors have been found, an agency spokeswoman said. Trooper spokeswoman Megan Peters said the crash site was spotted Sunday, but she could not immediately confirm that the three on board were killed. Wreckage of the helicopter burned, but Peters said it was not known how the fire started or how long it lasted. DOHA, Qatar Afghan leader in Qatar to discuss peace talks Afghan President Hamid Kar- zai met with the emir of Qatar in Doha Sunday to discuss the pos- sible opening of a Taliban office in the Gulf state. The move could foster peace negotiations with the Islamic fundamentalist movement in a bid to stem violence as foreign combat forces prepare to with- draw from Afghanistan by the end of 2014. The Qatar News Agency said Karzai met with the emir, Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, and other senior government officials on Sunday. He also held talks with Qatar's ambassador to Pakistan during a tour of an Islamic art museum in Doha. The report didn't give details, but Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai has said the talks would include the peace process and the opening of a Taliban office. -Compiled from Daily wire reports. University shifts focus Oil spill planned to non-resident students to overtake Diag Lack of state funding made up for with higher- paying students By JENNIFER CALFAS Daily StaffReporter Thousands of University stu- dents pack their bags each win- ter and hop on an AirBus headed toward the airport. Once they arrive, they disperse to 50 states and 127 countries. Out-of-state students con- stitute 38 percent of the stu- dent population - quadruple Michigan State's 9-percent non-resident population, more than triple University of Cali- fornia, Berkeley's 10 percent and exceeding the University of Wisconsin's 25 percent non-res- ident cap. Paying nearly $39,000 a year in tuition with room and board, these students add $88 million to the University's gen- eral fund annually. Although the University's non-resident population has hovered around 35 to 38 percent for the past 10 years, it's on the rise. Due to financial contribu- tions to the University and the decliningnumber ofhigh-school graduates in the state, non- resident students are a growing demographic on campus. After a decade of state fund- ing cuts for higher education - over half of which have come since Republican Gov. Rick Sny- der took office in 2011- the Uni- versity's general fund relies on tuition fees to make up for fund- ing lost from the state. In 1970, state appropriation served as 64 percent of the gen- eral fund and tuition accounted for another 26 percent. Now, due to a decrease in state appro- priation - which constitutes $273,056,700, or 16.6 percent of the University's budget - tuition continues to increase and provides 70.2 percent of the University's current budget. As the Board of Regents have approved an average 5.09-per- cent tuition increase each year over the past decade, the impact on non-resident tuition grows. At the Mackinac Policy Con- ference in May 2011, University President Mary Sue Coleman said she hopes to see more non- resident students attend the University. "We have capacity, and these students come paying the full freight," Coleman said. "They actually add tremen- dously to the economy of the state of Michigan." In 2011, the entering fresh- man class was 74 percent of non-resident students from families with $100,000 or more income a year, while only 55 percent of in-state students hail from families from the same socioeconomic status. Since non-resident tuition is comparable in price to a private university, the University has less socioeconomic diversity than it desires. Martha Pollack, vice provost for academic and budgetary affairs, said fixing this issue is at the forefront of the University's goals for its next capital campaign. While the University grants nearly $190 million to students for need-based and merit-based scholarships, they do not meet the full needs of non-resident students. To create more eco- nomic diversity and meet every student's financial needs, the goal of the University's next capital campaign is to provide full need-based financial aid to non-resident students. While the capital campaign will not begin until November, the University is already putting programs in place to begin the effort. Pollack said last year the University took half a percent- age of non-resident tuition to use as financial aid for non-res- ident students to meet full need for students from "Zero EFC" - zero expected family contribu- tion - backgrounds. While Director of Admissions Ted Spencer said in an e-mail that all admissions consider- ations and decisions are made blind to student need, Univer- sity Provost Phil Hanlon said a prospective student's decision to attend the University should not be hindered by a lack of financial aid. "The students' decision may not be need-blind," Hanlon said. "We try really hard to provide financial aid to a student who's admitted, depending on what their need is. We're not where we want to be; we have a ways to go still." While Pollack said the Uni- versity doesn't purposefully accept more non-resident stu- dents due to their financial contributions, the non-resident population is at a high due to a decreasing number of Michi- gan's high-school graduates. The state's population consti- tutes 3.3 percent of the nation's population, a decrease from 4.4 percent in 1970. Due to this decrease, there are fewer 18-year-olds eligible for accep- tance to the University and a smaller applicant pool from within the state. While there were 190,000 18-year-olds in the state in 1976, there will be 155,000 18-year-olds within the next year. By 2026, the number will decrease to120,000. Pollack said that, accordingto her calculations, the University admits five percent of all high school graduates from the state. "We try to admit a class so that the last student we admit from in-state is just as quali- fied as the last student we admit from out-of-state," Pollack said. "That's why as you see a drop- off from in-state population, you're seeing an increase in out- of-state population." Joe Greene, the principal at North Farmington High School in Farmington Hills, Mich., said the students who have equivalent grades to grad- uates that have been accepted to the University received more deferrals and denials in early- action decisions this year. The school usually matriculates 40 to 60 seniors to the University each year. Greene said he believes the University continues to enhance its diversity by accepting non- resident students, but should consider "broadening its stan- dards" to accept a wider variety of students. He cited former Uni- versity President James Angell's belief that the University should provide "an uncommon educa- tion for the common man." "This is a tough leadership challenge for the University to figure out," Greene said, adding there's an intrinsic obligation to seek a student body that's as diverse as possible. While he said the University must meet full need-based aid standards of its in-state stu- dents, Greene acknowledged thatprovidingaid to out-of-state students would create a more diverse student population. As the next capital campaign emphasizes providing full finan- cial aid to its non-resident stu- dents approachesthe University plans to inspire donors to target their donations to scholarships and human capital rather than buildings and renovation. "We need to fashion this in a way donors can get excited about the difference they can make in people's lives so a lot of this will be storytelling about what students have done and what the impact of hav- ing various scholarships has been," President Coleman said. "We need to describe for people what the need is. They don't necessarily understand our unmet need, particularly for out-of-state students. We can't be need-blind." CSG aims to raise awareness about sustainability with week of events By PAULA FRIEDRICH Daily StaffReporter The Central Student Govern- ment's Environmental Issues Commission kicked off their celebration of Earth Week with a potluck-style dinner in the Dana Building Sunday night. Representatives from various sustainability focused student organizations sat, ate and chat- ted about plans for the com- ing week. Most plans concern the Diag, which become center stage for events held this week by multiple student and com- munity organizations promot- ing sustainability. LSA senior Dana Rollison, the commission's chair, said the goal of the week is to increase awareness of environmental issues on campus. Relatively new initiatives will be high- lighted, such as the push for the University to remove endow- ment investments from the fos- sil fuel industry, which will be on the Diag Wednesday making a "photo petition" to send to the University's Board of Regents. "The University is so involved with sustainability research," Rollison said. "They have made it clear in the past few years that sustainability defines the Uni- versity of Michigan, they have made it a goal to decrease car- bon emissions (and) decrease waste." Sunday's "Food Day on The Diag," headed by the University of Michigan Student Sustain- ability Initiative and the CSG commission, featured a collec- tion of student organizations and local businesses show- casing local and sustainable food practices alongside an art installation. "It's kind of like a papier- mache tree that's lit up in the middle of the Diag, and the roots represent our member groups which are all the student groups that are working on sus- tainable food initiatives around campus," said Rackham student Arielle Fleisher, a of member the UMSSI. "The branches represent our goals which are focused on education, commu- nity building and production." Tuesday, the commission will partner with conservation groups Oceana and the Sierra Club for a mock oil spill, an art installation meant to raise awareness for events like the 2010 oil spill in the Kalamazoo River. The installation is one of many events happening around college campuses in April, said LSA senior Lydia Geschiere, a Oceana campus representative and EIC board member. "It's literally a giant, shiny, slippery tarp with hazmat suits just like an oil spill," Rollison said. Other events will focus on sustainable transportation and climate change. Mandela rests in hospital on Easter Former president recovers after Pneumonia scare JOHANNESBURG (AP) - Former South African President Nelson Mandela had a restful day in a hospital Sunday and is improving following treatment for a recurrence of pneumonia, the government said. The office of President Jacob Zuma thanked South Africans who prayed for 94-year-old Mandela at Easter church ser- vices this weekend, as well as people at home and around the world who showed their "love and support in various ways" for the anti-apartheid leader and his family. "We also thank foreign gov- ernments for their messages of support," Zuma's office said in a statement. The government "is satisfied that the doctors are providing the former president with the best medical care possible to enable his recovery and com- fort. They have reported a further improvement in his con- dition," the statement said. Mandela was admitted to a Pretoria hospital near mid- night Wednesday. It was his third trip to a hospital since December, when he was treat- ed for a lung infection and also had a procedure to remove gallstones. Earlier in March, he spent a night in a hospital for what officials said was a sched- uled medical test. "The whole world must come together and pray for him," Zacheus Phakathi, a security guard, said Sunday at an out- door service on a hill overlook- ing Johannesburg. In Pretoria, the capital, Henry Hyar, a restaurant wait- er, standing by a hospital where Mandela is believed to be, said it was unfortunate that Mandela could not be with his family at home during Easter. "I'm not happy about it," Hyar said. "We're praying for him to get better as soon as pos- sible." On Saturday, Zuma's office reported that Mandela was breathing without difficulty after having a procedure to clear fluid in his lung area. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @MICHIGANDAILY @THEBLOCKM