Gita higher education’ Register now for week long training camps. 541829-3113 Garden shed at Hill House, by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Helensburgh, Scotland t the root of great architecture are the 7ideas, beliefs, principles, and craft that I shape ordinary materials into roottts that pierce the heart. This course offers a holistic view of how great places greimade and why they continue to evoke deep feeling, even hundreds of years later. . Architecture 399: Great Architecture CRN: 30235 Credits: 4 Time: 13:00-13:50 115 Lawrence Hail mays: MWF : Panel mulls race issue An upcoming U.S. Supreme Court case prompted a panel to discuss the future of Affirmative Action Roman Gokhman Campus/City Culture Reporter Less than a month remains be fore the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments for controver sial Affirmative Action programs at the University of Michigan. In an ticipation, the University Center on Diversity and Community held a panel discussion to debate the implications of the decisions on higher education Wednesday. The complaints, filed by white students who claim they were de nied admission to the University of Michigan’s undergraduate and law programs in favor of lesser-qualified students of color, was the main top ic of debate at “The End of Affirma tive Action? Diversity, Higher Edu cation and Public Policy.” “Affirmative Action is either as old as the sun or as new as the 1960s,” said moderator Keith Aoki, an associate professor at the University School of Law. University School of Law Instruc tor Kate Weatherly, a former associ ate editor of the Michigan Journal on Race and Law and student at the University of Michigan when the lawsuits were filed, said the univer sity favors white students. “It’s the biggest Civil Rights case in 25 years,” she said. Weatherly said that out of 25,000 freshman admission appli cations university officials re ceive, they choose 5,000 on a point system that favors Cau casian students. “They do say they look at each one individually,” she said sarcastically. Out of 150 points, Weatherly said 110 are based on academic Law school professor Kate Weatherly, a former student at the University of Michigan and former editor of the Michigan Journal of Race and Law, gave statistical information on how the university chooses its students at the CODAC forum on Affi rmative Action. Mark McCambridge Emerald achievements such as high SAT scores and high school grades. Forty points are based on other factors — 20 for minority status and 20 for those who are in a so cial or economic advantage. She said students cannot qualify for both categories. “Those (social and economic disadvantage points) are for poor white people,” she said. Panelist Tomas Nullick Baiza, assistant director of multicultural recruitment in University Admis sions, said the University of Michi gan’s defense of Affirmative Action is nothing more than a symbolic gesture because the university is close to a large black population. “It goes a long way to recruit 90 95 percent of African Americans,” he said. Baiza said that while he sup ports Affirmative Action, it would be foolish to not invent a new strategy for diversifying universi ties because the programs will not last forever. “We need to look for a new vehi cle,” he said. About 80 students, faculty and community members attended the panel discussion, which also included University School of Law Associate Professor Garrett Epps, Norman Dorsen Fellow and Wayne Morse Fellow John Branam, Director of the Universi ty Affirmative Action Office Pen ny Daugherty, Associate Professor in the Charles H. Lundquist Col lege of Business Marc Weinstein and Chief of Human Resources for the Oregon Department of Transportation Rudy Williams. Contact the reporter atromangokhman@dailyemerald.com. look info the OPE Classifieds 346-434300 014617 Do you need to take t!| GRE • GMAT • TOEFL* PPST/PRAX The University of Oregon Testing Office is an official ETS computer-based testing site. Testing is available year-round, Monday-Friday, 2 sessions a day. Appointments can be scheduled by calling 541.346.2772 or by visiting the Testing Office. The Testing Office is located on the 2nd floor (Rm. 238) of the University Health and Counseling Center, 1590 E. 13th Ave., Eugene OR. The period of greatest demand is usually Sept, through March, so it makes sense to plan ahead. For more information visit the Testing Office web site at http://www.uoregon.edu/~lestiiig/ REGISTRATION BEGINS March 13th at 10:00 am SPRING WORKSHOPS GERMAN COURSES FOR SUMMER GER 104 1" Year Intensive German 07 credits, CRN 41957, 9:00-12:50 MUWHF, 106 FR GER 105 l- Year Intensive German 08 credits, CRN 41958,9:00-12:50 MUWHF, 106 FR, prerequisites GER 104 GER 204 Intensive 2“* year German >1 06 credits, CRN 41959,9:00-11:50 MUWHF, 214 FR, prerequisites GER 105 GER 205 Intensive 2**1 Year German >1 06 credits, CRN 41960,9:00-11:50 MUWHF, 214 FR, prerequisites GER 204 or equivalent GER 223 GERMANY: MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY 04 credits. CRN 41955. 2:00-3:50 MUWH, 154 STB, Saskia Hintz. Satisfies Arts and Letters and Multicultural IB requirement. Examines complexities of the increasingly multi-ethnic German society through the writings of African, Turkish, and Jewish Germans. 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