SUMMER One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Regents set smell the andatory roses Mia Wolterink smells the dent stu feesi The Michigan Daily Summer Weekly will not publish on June 24, in observance of final exams. The Daily returns on July 1 chock-full of all the exciting news, sports arts and opinion you've come to expect Ann Arbor Presidential fellow award Assistant Professor of Anthropology John Mitani was recently named one of the first recipients of the Presidential Faculty Fellow Awards. Mitani will receive a grant of $100,000 per year for five years from the National Science Foundation to continue his studies of primate behavior and animal communication. Genius' awards Two University professors were named as recipients of the MacArthur - Foundation's annual grants awarded to 'genius' professors across the country. John Holland, a professor of psychology and electrical engineering and computer science will. receive $369,000. Ann Ellis Hanson, a visiting. associate professor of Greek and Latin, will receive $340,000. MacArthur fellows are free to spend their awards on whatever research they choose. Sports Coaching moves I Gary Moeller announced this week the hi ring of former Northwestern assistant Mike DeBord to fill the assistant coaching vacancy left when Jerry Hanlon moved to the. athletic department's development staff. Coaching moves ii Former Wolverine icer Billy Powers is retuming to the team as an assistant coach. Most recently an assistant at CCHA rival University of Illinois- Chicago, Powers fills the position left open when Dave Shand departed to attend law school. I peonies in x Nichols Arboretum yesterday. The flowers v are in full -T bloom at the entrance of the Arb, near Mary Markleyl residence "Jo- 7:x rahall. SHARON MUSHER/Daiy Dorsey arrested i n Rio by David Shepardson speech. Conference on Enivommental Daily Opinion Editor During Mwangi's speech - Development (UNCED), made A University student was which was harshly critical of a statementcriticizing President detained by Brazilian police af- U.S. environmental policy - Bush'senvironmentalpolicyand ter criticizing U.S.environmental theSecretariatwhowasincharge the decision to cut off television policy at a press conference of the meeting ordered confer- monitors covering Mwangi's during a plenary session of the ence television monitors shut- speech. Earth Summit last week. off. The terminals relayed the Individual groups attending Michael Dorsey, a Natural conference to the more than the summit frequently called Resources senior, was detained 5,000tmembers of the press who impromptu press conferences for fivehourswithapproximately were in Rio reporting on the throughout the week. 12 other youth representatives summit. During Dorsey's speech, from the global community. The 25-member youth del- U.N. security forces stormed the Last Friday morning, the egation -of which Dorsey was press conference and ripped off youth delegation to the Earth a member - spontaneously the identification badges of the Summit was given its only decided to walk out of the youth delegates. The police said chance to address the plenary plenary hall, in order to call a the press conference was an il- session of the conference. press conference and condemn legal demonstration on U.N. Wagaki Mwangi, a student at the shut-off. property. By the time Dorsey the University of Nairobi and At the press conference, had finished his statement, ap- Non-Governmental Organiza- Dorsey, whohad been attending proximately 30 officers formed tion (NGO) delegate from the conference as the official a barricade between the youth Kenya, was chosen by the del- youth observer on the U.S. del- delegatesand the approximately egation to make a seven-minute egation to the United Nations See DORSEy, Page 2 by Lauren Dermer Daily Staff Reporter Although students will have to wait until mid-August to find outnext year's tuition increases, otherline-itemstudent feeshave been determined. Students will no longer be directly charged for funding the Michigan Collegiate Coalition (MCC) - a statewide student group that lobbies on behalf of public university students. The University Board of Regents voted Thursday to eliminate the 35 cent-per-term fee that has been included on student tuition bills since 1988 because of dissatisfaction with some of the group's activities. Several regents claimed MCC does not always act in the interest of higher education, particularly this pastschoolyear whenit backedastatelegislator's bill seeking a constitutional limitation on tuition, capping it at the annual rate of inflation. - Regent Paul Brown (D- Petoskey) called the move by the Lansing-based group a"fatal mistake." He said, "Nothing could be more harmful to edu- cation in Michigan than to pass such a hare-brained scheme ... They dug ahole I'mnotgoing to pull them out of." MCC Chair Guy Clark told regents during the public com- ments session that the group no longer supports the bill. "We have, in essence, withdrawn any kind of activity around this is- sue," he said. But the regents still voted 8- 0 to drop the mandatory fee al- together. This decision could have serious reprecussions for MCC, since 25 percent of its campus support came from University studentslast year. Students at 11 of Michigan's 15 public univer- sitiesprovidedmoney for MCC. The unanimous regental de- cision did not reflect the recom- mendation made by the Michi- ganStudent Assembly-which has been responsible for chan- neling the money to MCC. In a letter to the board, MSA presidentEdeFoxaskedthatthe funds for MCC be included in the MSA fee, so that "the stu- dents, through a direct ballot question, will be able to decide for themselves the level of par- ticipation in MCC." But while MSA can stillhelp fund MCC, the money willnot come from a direct student tax. The board alsorejectedMSA recommendationsforanincrease in the mandatory student gov- ernmentfee-whichhelps fund Student Legal Services, the Ann Arbor Tenants Union and the assembly itself. MSA reccommended that the current fee of $6.27 per stu- dent per term be increased to a See REGENrS, Page 2 'U' maintains strict policy on residency by Emily Fries Daily Staff Reporter As the cost of a college education continues to rise, students across the nation are seeking creative ways tolower their tuition bills. These solutions range from joining ROTC to attending school part time while working to gain resident student status in the state of Michigan. Establishing resident studentstatus at the University is not a simple task. More than 1,800studentsapply tothe Residence Status Office for reclassification every year. Despite the strict deadlines and requirements more than 50percent of the requests are granted. Michigan has no uniform policy re- garding residency. Simply obtaining a driver's license or registering to vote does not guarantee in-state status, as at some other schools. Also, each university has the authority to establish its own residency regulations. At the University, one person, Paul Wright, Assistant University Registrar, grants or denies resident student status. Students may appeal Wright's decision to a five person board consisting of one faculty member, one student, and repre- sentatives from the offices of the Vice President for Student Affairs, the Vice President for Academic Affairs, and the Controller. An offer of full time employment in Michigan - during school or after graduation - is not sufficient grounds for resident status. "If they applied originally to the University from outside of the state and come here as a student and then find full- time employment while a student we need to determine if it is the job or the schoolthatis thereasonfor themcoming," Wright said. IheResidence Status Officemandates that students be U.S. citizens and main- tain continuous presencein Michigan for one year. "After that, we look at the merits of the application," Wright said. "There is no set criteria. There are a whole lot of factors. Basically, we ask, 'Did they re- but the presumption of non-residency?"' A handful of students each year ex- haust the appeals process and then choose to sue the University, but the University has never lost a case. For example, Jessica Vinter, a graduate student in Slavic Languages and Literature is considering suing the University because she feels that the criteria are arbitrarily applied. 'The rules are unfair and they use them to their own advantage. They dis- count the person altogether,"Vinter said. "They can construe therules to whatever serves their purpose." See REsiDCy, Page 2