Orientation Edition 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 17 Fraternity trio camps out for charity Group raising money for youth mentorship By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily Staff Reporter Mar. 6, 2008 - On a blustery win- ter night, while most students were tucked comfortably in their living rooms, three members of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity were trying to study amidst the backdrop noise coming from Washtenaw Avenue. Armed with a baseball bat for protection and wearing several layers of clothing to fight frost- bite, LSA sophomores Russ Cash ey and Tyler Keenan and Kinesiology sophomore Mike Fry have been living in a tent on the fraternity's lawn since Monday night and will continue to do so until this coming Monday. The campers are raising money for Pike's March 15 Comedy Night, an annual charity event held by the fraternity. The campers are asking other membersofPike to pledge one dollar per person per day for the duration of the campout. About 30 members of the fraternity have donated a total of about $650, Fry said. All of the money collected will go toward MichiganReachOut!, anAnn Arbor-based organization that spon- sors youth mentoring programs. The rules of the endeavor are strict. Caskey, Keenan and Fry can attend class, but they're only allowed to enter the house to change their clothing, tend to their hygiene and get food - which must be consumed outside. But the group hasn't completely gone without, though. For instance, the trio can't go out to eat, but it has found at leastone way to dodge that issue - having food delivered. Fry said they ordered pizza once. "We're not going to cheat. We wouldn't live it down," he said. "We've gotten yelled at for going in to get our food." While all studying, sleeping and other activities must be done inside the close living quarters, the guys seem to be getting along just fine. "They haven't gotten on each other's nerves - yet," said LSA freshman Doug Cunningham, Pike's public relations chair. Keenan said the brothers who aren't camping out have been sup- portive. They've sometimes shown it in strange ways, though - two brothers came out to the tent in the middle of the night and tried to scare the campers. The campers have endured other midnight visi- tors, too. "Wildlife is also kind of interest- ing, just hearing animals come up to the tent," Fry said. This is the first time Pike has held a charity camp-out. Fry, the chair of Comedy Night, said he chose the unorthodox fundraising method because it would allow the rest of the fraternity brothers tobe directly involved in the fundraising. Fry said Pike chose to raise money for Michigan Reach Out! because of LSA sophomores Russ Caskey and Tyler Keenan and Kinesiology sopho- more Mike Fry camped out for a week in March to raise money for charity. the relationship between the two and bring out some of the kids." groups. Members of the fraternity Fry said living in the great out- mentor children in the program. doors has had at least one other "It has close ties to our house added benefit. - over 130 brothers have been "Part of the thing is that we can't involved. It's also a eat charity for watch TV all week, which is actu- the Ann Arbor conixpspnity," he said. ally good, because we're going to be "We can bring out all the mentors a lot more productive," said Fry. Students get busted for buying Policy change keeps IDs 'from international students Sept. 17, 2007 - When it comes to spotting fake IDs, it's all a matter of experience. So says Lorin Brace, who works nights at Village Corner, a cam- pus grocery stare known for con- fiscating the fake identification of underage students. Brace, a four-year veteran of Village Corner, said he sees "hun- dreds and hundreds of IDs from all over the country or the world" on an average weekend night. "Eventually you sort of figure out what certain IDs are supposed to look like or feel like," Brace said. The store once had a fake ID Wall of Shame, adorned with confiscated IDs from California to New Jersey, but it has since been taken down. When a Village Corner employee confiscates a fake ID, some students have gotten a bit hostile, Brace said. In one instance, a young woman leapt over the front counter in an attempt to get her fake ID back. Not only was she unsuccessful, but the fake ID listed her actual address, which allowed the police to locate her shortly thereafter. Above all, Brace said that there's no secret to spotting a fake ID. It merely comes down to hard- earned experience and intuition. - ANDY KROLL Secretary of State says policy didn't consider students By BETH WITTENSTEIN Daily StaffReporter Jan. 28, 2008 - A decision to stop granting Michigan identification to immigrants without permanent resident status could prevent inter- national students at the University from getting state driver's licenses. Last week, Michigan's Secretary of State made permanent legal status in the United States a requirement for anyone applying for state iden- tification. Michigan Attorney Gen- eral Mike Cox issued a statement last month saying illegal or non- permanent immigrants shouldn't be granted Michigan driver's licenses because that would be inconsistent with federal law. Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land followed the opin- ion by changing the policy. The change was an effort to crack down on illegal immigration by making it harder for undocumented immigrants to live in the state. But the decision will affect temporary immigrants living in the state legal- ly for work or educational purposes. In the past, Michigan law fol- lowed former Michigan Attorney General Frank Kelley's 1995 opin- ion that no one should be refused a driver's license based on legal citizen status. Before last week, Michiganwas one of eight states in America that didn't require proof of legal residence to apply for state identification. Rackham student Hsien-Chang Lin, said international students often use a Michigan driver's license as a means of identification rather than a passport. A driver's license is often asked for as identi- fication while using credit cards or when entering bars, Lin said. "It is not possible to bring a pass- port every day, because it is too important," Lin said. "The policy change should consider more than just the drivingissue." International students who had state identification before the poli- cy was enacted are legally allowed to use that ID. International stu- dents who were in the process of applying for identification, though, will not be allowed to get a driver's license or state ID. Lorin Brace, a manager of store has confiscated. Corner, displays a handful of fake IDs that t