The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, A pril 16, 2014 - 3A DRUGS From Page 1A are popular both as study aides and party drugs, other substances are growing in popularity. Steve said acid is a popular experimen- tal drug that students may try at least once. In early April, a Uni- versity officer discovered what appeared to be a rock of metham- phetamine during a routine traf- fic stop. The University deals with very few incidents of illegal drug pos- session internally. In its annual report, the Office of Student Con- flict Resolutions reported only 10 incidents of illegal drug posses- sion for the 2012-2013 academic year, all of which were cases of marijuana. During a spike in overall illegal drug possession incidents between the 2010-2011 and 2011-2012 academic years - which dealt with 26 and 24 reported incidents, respectively - there were only two reports of heroin and one of ecstasy. OSCR Director Jay Wilgus said the number of violations of the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities may not reflect increased or fluctuating drug consumption, but rather the level of enforcement in the community for a particular year. Accurate statistics about stu- dent drug use are difficult to collect. The University relies on the Internet-based Student Life Survey administered by the Institute for Research on Women and Gender and the Substance Abuse Research Center to gain an understanding of what portion of the population is using which drugs and how many. Since 2003, the survey reports that the use of prescribed stimu- lants for non-medical use has risen between 5.4 to 9.3 percent. Wolverine Wellness Director Mary Jo Desprez said that drug trends are often associated with perception of risk: When the perception of risk of a drug goes down, usage goes up; when the perception of risk goes up, the use goes down. This public health model may explain the rise in pre- scription drug abuse over the last decade or more. "Twenty years ago you didn't see commercials about any drug ever," Desprez said. "I would say prescription medications in gen- eral are much more marketed." Desprez said wide availability may also contribute to the rising trend in prescription drug abuse. "You don't really need a drug dealer," she said. "You need a medicine cabinet in someone's apartment." 5.1 percent of male students and 4.8 of females taking the Stu- dent Life Survey reported using ecstasy - and/or MDMA, collo- quially known as Molly - in the past year, an uptick from the 2.8 and 1.7 percent, respectively, that reported using the drug in 2011. In that time, ecstasy went from being the seventh most-used drug on campus to the third. Desprez said increases should not be made into a bigger problem than the data shows, especially considering that drug use num- bers beyond marijuana, accord- ing to the Student Life Survey, fall below 10 percent. At the same time, she said all drug use is wor- thy of the University's "awareness and attention." With regards to ecstasy and Molly, she said the slow upward trend could be attributed to a similar decrease in perceived risk that led to an increase in prescription drug use. But for ecstasy, she said the change in perception can be traced to a cul- tural narrative closely tied to the music scene. At the same time, usage of drugs like heroin and cocaine display no clear trend on campus within the last decade. Cocaine was reportedly used by 4.4 per- cent of men and 2.6 percent of women sampled in the 2013 sur- vey, an increase from 3.8 percent of men and 1.2 percent of women sampled in 2011. According to the 2013 survey, heroin was only used by 0.3 percent of the student population. Prof. Lloyd Johnston, who teaches in the Institute for Social Research and co-authored of the Monitoring the Future survey - a government-sponsored report on adolescent drug use from 1975 to 2008 - said nationally, levels of cocaine use are currently low. Amphetamines like Adderall are the most-used drugnationally among college students, which has risen in the past three or four years. Johnston said Molly is so new that it was not included on the 2013 survey. He added that though heroin use is not particularly significant overall within the national sur- vey, there are heroin problems in certain localities across the nation. While the University's campus is not currently one of these areas, many states, including Michigan, are experiencing an increase in heroin use. According to data collected by the Michigan Department of Community Health, deaths due to heroin overdose increased in Michigan from 271 between 1999 and 2002, to 728 between 2010 and 2012. The number of people admitted for heroin addiction treatment rose from 6,500 in 2002 to 13,600 in 2013. Desprez said heroin has not affected the University as much because there is still a high per- ception of risk, as well as punish- ment. "The penalties are a lot differ- ent," she said. "You get caught with a beer standing outside of a party - and you get caught with heroin? Really different." People often turn to heroin after abusing opiates like Vicodin, Percocet and Codeine because tolerance to those drugs develops quickly. "You need more and more to get the same desired effect," Desprez said. "That gets to be pretty expensive if you're buying it. And if someone says, 'well her- oin's really cheap and more pow- erful,' you can see how (turning to heroin) is goingto happen." Since the 1990s, heroin has become much cheaper and more potent. Taylor* - a freshman who claimed to drinks at least two times a week, uses cocaine or Molly once a week and deals to 20 off-and-on clients - said the transition to heroin can be dan- gerously easy. "You can buy a dose of heroin for ten bucks, $5 if you don't have a drug tolerance," he said. "Where- as the same high for Vicodin and Oxi would cost you probably $20 for Vicodin - which wouldn't be as good - and Oxi, which is almost the same, for almost 80 bucks." Heroin is now coming in a cleaner cut than it ever has before. It can be taken without a needle - something that traditionally drove many potential users away. Relatively pure heroin is available to smoke or inhale rather than inject. "You can smoke it too," he said. "If you get black tar heroin you can smoke it and you can inject black tar. And if you get china white, which is the powder, you can snort that or you can inject that." Taylor agreed with the num- bers presented by the University's Student Life Survey regardingthe low frequency of heroin use. He also agreed with the slight rise in Molly usage and, especially, the increase in students abusing pre- scription drugs. "People feel more comfortable around prescription drugs, espe- cially Adderall," he said. "People think of it as a study aid, but if you crush that shit up, it's a party drug." Taylor said he sells cocaine, Molly, LSD and some prescrip- tion drugs. Four of his clients purchase drugs from him in greater quantities and re-sell it to people within their fraterni- ties. Though he said the use of harder drugs on campus is mini- mal, any upward trend could be attributed to the perception of marijuana at large. "Now that the weed culture is becoming more relaxed, people are coming into contact with it more and therefore more people are questioning if everything is just as bad," he said. "And I would like to say everything is not all bad." Desprez said identifying a geographic pattern of drug use applicable to social demograph- ics - dorms, Greek Life and off campus, among other areas - is difficult to determine because the University sees so much turnover in student life. "One floor can have a heavy party reputation one year and then the next year, a whole bunch of new folks move in," she said. "That's true about athletics teams. I think that's true about a Greek house. But does one have enough years of that reputation that it starts to recruit people?" Jane*, a freshman who claimed to have experimented with sev- eral drugs, said her impression is that the Residential College has more drug use than the average dorm, and most drug use is not happening in Greek Life. LSA junior Tommy Wydra, president of the Interfraternity Council, said that there is not a drug problem within Greek Life at the University. "Based on what I've seen it's no where near as prevalent as it is at other campuses," Wydra said. He added that most drug-abuse incidents and prevention plans are handled internally by indi- vidual fraternities, though avoid- ing the illegal use of prescription drugs is part of the IFC's sober monitoring training program. Chief Neumann said that drug prevention is difficult because it requires follow-ups that can't occur simply because someone is in possession of a pill bottle. "It takes leg work," he said. "It does take investigation and it's certainly not easy to do." Neumann said the drug prob- lem is not necessarily limited to students, calling it "a broader problem within our society." However, not everyone agrees with this assertion. "There are a lot of false things about how everyone who uses them is automatically a bad person," Jane said. "I'm not addicted to anything. I know that there's a lot of negative ste- reotypes about people who use them but I've had straight A's this semester." Mark Fancher, ACLU of Michigan Racial Justice staff attorney, discusses affirmative action at Rackham Amphitheater Tuesday. ACLU From Page1A history of affirmative action, explaining how the University played a role in the history of affirmative action through 2003 U.S. Supreme Court cases Grut- ter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bol- linger. During his lecture, Fancher said affirmative action serves a role in providing minority stu- dents, who have different life and cultural experiences than white students do, an opportunity to share their stories in an educa- tional setting and enhance the overall community culture. Fancher said this preferential treatment like that used in affir- mative action is given to athletes, children of donors to the Univer- sity and instate residents with- out the same resistance as with minority students. He ended his lecture by dis- cussing the recent jurisdiction over Proposal 2, a Michigan initiative on the 2006 ballot to end affirmative action in public schools that passed with a major- BAMN From Page 1A typically white students are bet- ter able to prepare for the college curriculum while students from families with lower socioeco- nomic statuses work just as hard without the same payoff. Ted Spencer, associate vice provost and executive director of undergraduate admissions, lis- tened to the students' concerns, who insistedtheUniversityneed- ed to be more active in admit- ting minority students. Students asked Spencer to explain exactly why they weren't admitted, even chanting for Spencer to show them their files. Kimbrough, who is currently a high school senior, has a GPA of 3.5 and an ACT score of 23 out of the possible 36. These scores are below the average scores of the Fall 2013 freshman class in which students' GPA averaged 3.85 and ACT scores ranged from 29 to 33. Still, Kimbrough has served as the executive director of her school's National Honors Society Chapter, of which she is now the president, and has worked with the Alternative for Girls non- profit organization, which aids at-risk youth. Additionally, this past weekend, she and her debate team won the Urban Debate National Championship. Kimbrough said she was given a deferred admission decision after applying early action and subsequently denied admission - a decision she felt was unfair given her level of academic and extracurricular success through- ity vote. ACLU attorneys recently opposed Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette in court, saying that a majority-passing legislature that disenfranchises a minority group is discrimina- tory and unconstitutional. Fur- thermore, the fact that students of color must first appeal to the political system before they can lobby University admissions cre- ates unnecessary burdens on those students. "It's inherently on its face unfair, and certainly it's uncon- stitutional," Fancher said. "And that's the very basis of the law- suit that is before the court right now." LSA junior Connor Caplis, the chair of the ACLU Under- graduate Chapter, said the tim- ing of the event was appropriate after the recent #BBUM media demonstration organized by the Black Student Union and other efforts minority students took to express the lack of diversity this past year. "I think there are a lot of mis- conceptions about affirmative action," Caplis said. "Prop.2 had a lot of problematic messaging that out high school. "It frustrates me when I'm actually trying to do something, bring this over to the University and show them that, 'Yes, you can still come from this kind of area with one parent at that home and not a lot of money com- ingin every year, but you can still be somebody,'" she said. Aguirre and Martinez said another major issue at their high school is money, noting the Uni- versity's tuition costs were too high for their families to afford. They said the price of tuitiontyp- ically discourages students from applying with the knowledge they would not be able to attend even if they were admitted. "It's demoralizing how they pretty much give you the bait and take it away; they're just playing with you," Aguirre said. "I felt the same way. Even if I'm able to get in, what is the point because I can't pay for it?" As the BAMN protesters left the student activities building, Spencer had a candid conver- sation with Martin about the admissions process as others in the lobby looked on. Martin told Spencer about her work outside of class, such as starting a Black student union and working with various other volunteering and community outreach work. Martin tried to appeal to her and Spencer's shared race as Black individuals, asking him to, "look at the color of his skin," sayingthat he should understand the added difficulties many minority students face when applying to schools. "I've changed my commu- nity," she told Spencer. "You've said minority students were get- ting preferential treatment when in reality that's not true, no one is gaining any preferential treat- ment from this policy." Many students came out to hear Fancher speak, including LSA freshman Kiaura Clark. After going to a diverse high school, she said she felt an almost "anti-culture shock" upon arriv- ing at the University due to its lack of diversity. She added that she came to the event because she has a dif- ficult time having educated con- versations with students who disagree with affirmative action, both because it is an emotionally charged issue and because of gen- eral ignorance surrounding its history. "It's very helpful to hear a breakdown of what exactly affirmative action is because a lot of time people who have these debates aren't educat- ed," Clark said. "I like hearing the reasons again just so when I'm communicating with other students, I have even more knowledge that I can add to the conversation." denied me admissions, and I've already done what you're trying to teach your kids here to do." Still, Spencer told both Martin and the group at large that the University is highly selective, and even students who excel in certain areas may not have the strongest overall application to be accepted. Spencer rejected the accusa- tion that the University does not do enough to bring in minority students. Despite the elimina- tion of affirmative action poli- cies following the passage of Proposal 2 in 2006, Spencer said the admissions office still uses a holistic approach to stu- dent admissions. The Office of Admissions evaluates each indi- vidual applicant on academic experiences, student essays, let- ters of recommendation, extra- curricular experiences and socioeconomic profile, among other considerations. "We look at everything that we can to try to figure out how could this student be success- ful at Michigan and would it be a good fit," Spencer said. "We'll put our record up against any school in the country. I talk to my friends at Stanford and at Princeton; they both say we use the same process to evaluate stu- dents." As for the rejected high school students, they said they plan to continue working toward admit- tance despite being admitted to other colleges. BAMN organiz- ers said the group plans to hold another protest next week and will likely bring more students who were not accepted to the University. CSG From Page 1A dent fee. The fee has notrisen from its current rate, $7.19, since 2005. The resolution reads: "Contin- gent upon approval of the fee limit increase by the Board of Regents, the Assembly supports raising the Central Student Government fee to the maximum limit approvedby the student body and the Board of Regents." Business senior Michael Proppe, former CSG president, said in a presentation to the assem- bly that the fee, which is the CSG's primary source of funding, could even be raised by $2.81 to an even 10 dollars. Proppe said raising the fee would only increase tuition .015 percent, compared to a 32 percent increase in CSG revenue that could be used to aid student organiza- tions- a goal that was impeded this year by lower enrollment and less "carry forward" funds from past administrations. Business senior Eric Kibler, CSG treasurer, added that CSG's recently updated policy of pro- viding rolling applications, three times each semester, for student organizations seeking funding has increased the use of funds, which drains the budget more quickly. Hence, a larger budget could help meet the needs of more student organizations. "We have more organizations applying for more money. We are actually awarding more money to organizations," Proppe said. "The carry forward has come way down. We have an average of 260K per year in the old system com- pared to 40K now" According to a campus poll sent out by the CSG last week, 60 per- cent of the 2,000 student respon- dents support the $2 increase, whereas 50.19 percent favor the $2.81increase. Although the assembly did not vote on the resolutions, members did elect the 2014-2015 speaker and vice speaker of the assembly: LSA junior Christian Bashi and Public Policy junior Laurel Ruza, respectively. In his opening remarks to the assembly following this selec- tion process, Public Policy junior Bobby Dishell, CSG president, wel- comed new representatives and also plugged the accomplishments of Big Ten on the Hill earlier this month. Big Ten on the Hill is a spring conference in which student gov- ernment delegations from each university in the Big Ten go to Washington, D.C. to meet with their state's Congressional repre- sentatives and lobby for initiatives that are beneficial to college stu- dents. Rackham student Adi Sathi, the executive director of the Associa- tion of Big Ten Students, said in an e-mail that the event was a success. "It was a great honor to work with such great student leaders and discuss higher education poli- cy as well as campus issues such as mental health and sexual assault prevention with the 14 schools in the Big Ten," Sathi wrote. BECAUSE THE #POLARVORTEX WILL NEVER END, CURL UP WITH A CUP OF COFFEE AND READ THE MICHIGAN DAILY! Follow us on Twitter @MICHIGANDAILY I I A 0 4 A