LI I \(i The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 3, 2013 - 3C TUITION Coalition rallies at campus hub A Students gather in support of tuition equality By ALICIA ADAMCZYK Daily StaffReporter SEPT. 19, 2012 - Seats reserved for University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman and University Provost Philip Han- lon may have remained notice- ably empty during Tuesday's rally for tuition equality on the Diag, but that didn't stop students invested in the cause from demanding that top administrators take steps to ease restrictions on undocu- mented students. About 100 students gath- ered at the steps of the Hatcher Graduate Library where the Coalition for Tuition Equal- ity - a partnership of vari- ous student groups seeking to establish in-state tuition rates for undocumented students living in Michigan - hosted a "graduation" ceremony for undocumented students to demonstrate solidarity for the cause. Public Policy senior Kevin Mersol-Barg, the founder of CTE, said the mock graduation symbolized a momentous life event that the coalition hopes disenfranchised students will be able to experience in the future. Though the coalition has made progress in recent months, he said he still isn't satisfied with its current prog- ress with University adminis- trators. "It's been slow going," Mer- sol-Barg said. "I'm not sure if our goals are concrete enough in terms of where we stand and where the University stands." LSA sophomore Daniel Morales - a previously undoc- umented student who has been a frequent speaker on tuition equality issues on campus - introduced the ceremony's graduates, a group of undocu- mented students from south- west Detroit. After alluding to Clint East- wood's infamous speech at the Republican National Conven- tion, where the actor spoke to an empty chair as if President Barack Obama were sitting in it, Morales addressed the Uni- versity's absent president. He said the coalition would like Coleman to publicly acknowledge, on the record, her support for tuition equal- ity. He added that he wants the University to be transparent in any potential future imple- mentation processes. "Unfortunately the Univer- sity of Michigan doesn't see all Michigan students the same," Morales said. "(Coleman) must take the steps towards tuition equality." The ceremony included speeches by leaders from seven University groups, including the Muslim Students' Associa- tion, the South Asian Aware- ness Network and the Latino Students Organization. Central Student Govern- ment President Manish Parikh, a Business senior, said he attended the event not only to display CSG's support, but also to provide guidance to the student activists struggling to work with University leaders. "One of those aspects of advice is to keep working with the administration, and to keep treating the administra- tion, who are their elders, with respect and kindness," Parikh said. Sanjay Jolly, a public policy graduate student and repre- sentative from the University's chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, spoke next, and apologized to Parikh for ignoring his suggestions of politeness before starting an impassioned speech about the administration's lack of sup- port. "I have one thing to say," Jolly said to a cheering crowd. "Stop this bullshit!" LSA senior Chris Askew- Merwin said he believes the group would make faster prog- ress with the University if it hosted more dramatic demon- strations like student sit-ins to attract the attention of admin- istrators. "I'm worried that rallies won't accomplish as much as they should," Askew-Merwin said. "I think the way that we could really show the power of the student body is by doing something a bit more visible." Public Policy senior Eli Day, a member of Students Organiz- ing Against Prisons, said he was glad to see the strong turn- out for the event. "I think it's a righteous cause," Day said. "I think it's good to highlight the link- age between the unavailabil- ity of education for certain demographics and the causal relationship with that and incarceration." Engineering senior Kanchan Swaroop, who wore a "Tuition Equality" pin on her chest and clutched a poster in support of the cause, said she attend- ed the ceremony because she believes every student who has been a Michigan resident their entire life should pay the in- state tuition rate. "No human being can be ille- gal," Swaroop said. VICKY LIU/Daily Students from the Coalition for Tuition Equality wait and prepared to hear the Board of Regents discuss whether the University of Michigan will take the initiative in letting undocumented students receive in-state tuition on Thursday, July 18th at the North Campus Research Complex Tuition equality passes during Regents meeting Undocumented students eligible for in-state tuition under new guidelines ByAARON GUGGENHEIM ManagingNewsEditor JULY 18, 2013 - Antonio Contreras choked up as he spoke of his two college-bound sons, Javier and Jose, who are undocumented students, dur- ing the public commentary sec- tion. "I understand that is the rules or policies of the Univer- sity of Michigan ... (but) same as me you also have kids and I know you wish the best for them," Contreras said. Contreras came from Mexico 18 years ago looking for a better future for his family but with his low-income - he only grad- uated from middle school in Mexico - paying out-of-state tuition was impossible. "(My sons) have what it takes to become professionals but sometimes it is impossible for them to achieve this thing," he said. "They consider them- selves Wolverines." The pathway for Contreras' sons, who were both accepted to the University, to attend got slightly easier as the Universi- ty's Board of Regents approved a changeon Thursday to the residency guidelines, providing in-state tuition for both undoc- umented students and military veterans. Regents Andrew Richner (R- Grosse Pointe Park) and Andrea Fischer Newman (R- Ann Arbor) both cast dissent- ing votes, citing unanswered questions surrounding the policy and its potential legal implications. These simplified residency guidelines will provide in-state residency to those who are Michigan residents, served in the U.S. military or attended hree years of middle school and two years of high school in Michigan. The policy will take effect in January 2014. Undocumented students who graduated high school and applied to the Uni- versity within 28 months of graduation will qualify for in- state tuition. But for 29,000 undocument- ed students currently living in Michigan, federal financial aid - which provides grants and loans with low interest rates - is still unavailable, which com- plicates the process of paying for a University education. Regent Mark Bernstein (D- Ann Arbor) said only a cen- tury earlier his family would have been considered undocu- mented immigrants, and that access to higher education has "always been a ladder of oppor- tunity" to attaining the Ameri- can dream. "There are very few moments when strands of history weave together, and for me, today is one of those extraordinary moments," Bernstein said. Bernstein said he commend- ed the Coalition for Tuition Equality on their hard work. The group, which was found- ed in the fall of 2011, has con- tinued to advocate for tuition equality through numerous protests, and several of its members served on a task force with the administration to develop these new residency guidelines. "I think they have just done such an impressive and dis- tinguished job, and they have done it with dignity combined with passion," Bernstein said. Engineering student Joshua Simister, president of the See EQUALITY, Page 9 U G N i ZA T!fiNA Consider OSI 7he C04iws I at t e Ihwersq c Ili m prrvrPrr am4's iW-MI =tm rm%6m y w d . ccme lb9U iitrrnwirtt a t ttv ow ewemytts ard, sl kwwk d II gr h ;, mm 5c, Oirrrt rrs, ~ a rd more,. A