Monday, July 18, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 'U' alumni work to change the image'of Detroit Graduates bring new enterprise to the dilapidated city By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter In 2008, Detroit landed on Forbes' annual list of "America's Most Miserable Cities," and hope that its automakers could com- pete with foreign counterparts dwindled. As the city's population continues to decline and its unem- ployment rate remains higher than the national average, the fear that Detroit is slowly disintegrat- ing remains steadfast. However, there are increas- ing signs of economic growth and vitality appearing throughout the city, most prominently through the work of young adults - includ- ing University alumni - who are ADMISSIONS From Page 1 Undergraduate Admissions, said the University expected an increase in applicants when they joined the Common App since other schools that made the switch over the years have seen between a 6-percent and 30-percent increase. Spencer added that while the website makes it easy for students to applyto manyschools at once, it's not the only reason for the increase. In fact, Spencer said the University has seen a surge in applicants for 10 years prior to when they switched to the new application. The academic reputation of the University makes people want to apply, Spencer said, and over the past several years the great- est increase in applicants has been among out-of-state students. "Michigan has an outstand- ing academic reputation. We have outstanding faculty, we have out- standing facilities and we have out- standing students," he said.. Furthermore, the University's more than 300 majors and approxi- mately 3,000 courses are a "big draw" to high school seniors look- ing to apply to college, Spencer said. He added the increase in finan- cial aid - namely the $137 million increase the University's Board of Regents approved this year in light developing new businesses, chari- ties and art projects in the spaces left derelict after the decade of economic struggles. Among the college-educated Detroit newcomers is 23-year-old University alum Jimmy Tomc- zak, who founded TOMBOLO - a company that makes sandals from recycled billboard vinyl that imi- tates the feel of being barefoot - in September 2010. Tomczak said he was inspired to start the com- pany through the University's fos- tering of entrepreneurial spirit as well as his own personal vision of a revitalized Detroit. "My vision isn't just the shoes, but the vision to promote con- scious consumption and creative reuse," Tomczak said.."And I think that is a much greater impact and a much bigger vision to have, to be able to say that it's not just the tangible, but both the tangible and intangible innovations that hap- of state budgetcuts to higher educa- tion - also serves as an incentive for students to apply to the University. "Anything we can do to reduce the cost of an education is an incen- tive," Spencer said. "It can't do any- thing but help." Due to these incentives, the University is expecting the enter- ing class to be about 5,970 students - approximately 500 students less than last year, Spencer said. As of June, 16,046 applicants were offered admission and 6,540 paid the enrollment deposit, but even those who paid the deposit may not choose to attend the Uni- versity in the fall,. according to a July 13 University press release. The press release also said admissions are based on a holistic review of the individualized infor- mation received about each appli- cant, including the high schools students attend and if those schools are not already significantly repre- sented at the University. The University received 4,265 applications from underrepresent- ed minority students - a 14.8-per- cent increase from last year - and 1,576 were offered admission, which is a decrease of 3.7 percent, accord- ing to the release. The University will announce the final statistics as well as an analysis of applicants by race, gen- der and other specifics in October, the release said. pen as a result of creativity in a place like Detroit." Tomczak said he believes Detroit is ready to "experience a rebirth" and the burgeoning entrepreneurial culture has uplift- ed the city and revamped its busi- ness landscape. "It's about those people that are connecting and coming back together with the city in mind," he said. "There are so many things happening like that with youth and different connections that it's not just about automotive and corporate protection anymore. It's about the students, entrepreneurs and makers that are out there doing it." The shift is partially the result of demographic trends over the last decade. While a quar- ter of Detroit's population fled in response to economic hardships, duringthat same time the city saw a 59-percent increase in college- CRIMES From Page 1 "We disseminate information to (DPS) more readily than we ever have," Lance said. "We have a very cooperative effort both administrative and street wise in terms of working together tc solve crime." Diane Brown, DPS spokes- woman, said University Police work hard to ensure the campus remains safe at all times. "The Department and the University are content that it's a relatively safe environmen -though there are crimes that occur, a number of the crimes are preventable," Brown said. Brown said larceny is the most prevalent crime on campus adding that students should be aware that University libraries educated residents who are under lished the first issue of MASH this the age of 35, according to a July 1 article in The New York Times. Donald Grimes, a senior research associate at the Univer- sity's Institute for Research on Labor, Employment and the Econ- omy, said youth play a crucial role in revitalizing the city. "That's probably the most important positive indicator that there's more involvement and more interest in people from your generation," Grimes said. "They see it as sort of an exciting place to try to work in and revive. You're sort of on the cutting edge of urban revitalization." Mashawnta Armstrong, a 28-year-old University alum, lec- turer in the University's Taubman College of Architecture of Urban Planning, and founder and editor- in-chief of MASH Magazine, said she was similarly inspired. As a native of Detroit, Armstrong pub- are open to the public, and should take responsibility of their per- sonal possessions. "If students and people can do a better job at keeping their belongings secure, then we would have less crime," Brown said. While theft is the most com- mon campus crime, Brown said that personal crimes do occur and drinking may cause people to be more "vulnerable" and suscep- tible to situations where they may be endangered. "Perpetrators see a more easily-targeted, vulnerable per- son, and then would try to rob t them and rarely try to assault them," Brown said. "Many of the assaults really are equally blamed on both sides ... we rarely will see an unprovoked stranger attack." Brown said a range of mea- sures is currently in place to March with the aim of upending misconceptions about the city. "The purpose (of MASH) is to change that perception of Detroit," Armstrong said. "We always see the negative connota- tions in media aboutDetroit - that it's dirty, it's dilapidated. There's so many negative things that reso- nate about the city thatgoes out to the world, and we want to change that with the magazine." Because of this, MASH's sec- ond issue will bear an idea Arm- strong imagined for her senior thesis at the University in 2008: renovating a dilapidated house in one of the city's deserted neigh- borhoods. After the magazine publishes a picture of the house, Armstrong said she will invite readers to the building to suggest renovations and then will work on raising the funds needed to bring the changes to fruition. assist students with preventing potentially dangerous situations, noting that DPS patrols certain areas of campus with extra con- trol. She added students also receive numerous safety tips as part of the DPS video shown to new students at orientation, at the bottom of electronic crime alerts and on signs in public uni- versity places such libraries and recreation areas. Ultimately, she said the issue lies in personal responsibility of University members in following the suggested safety measures. "The problem isn't that peo- ple aren't being informed about this stuff - the problem is that they aren't adhering to many of these safety precautions," Brown said. "For the most part, I'm sure there are some people who are and they haven't been victim- ized." SHOW OFF YOUR DAILY PRIDE Purchase Michigan Daily T-shirts online. Go to store.michigandaily.com/t-shirt