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Showers ïź 53°/ 47° chance of precipitation: 60%
Vol. 88, No. 32 Thursday, January 26, 2012
QUOTA CONUNDRUM
Copper Beech breach
Residents uninformed of break-in, struggle with management
GRIFFIN HARRINGTON / THE BREEZE
Of the 18,971 students enrolled at JMU, around 2,485 are from minority groups. Students widely disagree about the role of affirmative action.
JMU takes race into account during admissions process to increase low minority percent >> Studentsâ opinions on affirmative action, page A5 By LISA WATSON contributing writer
For some JMUâs skewed gender ratio is a draw, however another issue is much more likely to alienate than attract. Universities have debated whether the use of affirmative action in admissions departments is necessary to increase diversity. Freshman Erin Holland thinks that diversity on campus helps make the college experience unique.
JMU population ïź ïź ïź ïź ïź
87.2 percent Caucasian 4.8 percent Asian American 4.1 percent African American 2.5 percent Hispanic American 1.4 percent international (ACCORDING TO JMU ADMISSIONS)
âItâs one of the things that separtes college from high school,â Holland said. John Briskey, a junior comunication studies major, doesnât support affirmative action in the admissions process, but likes the idea of having a diverse student body. âSure, Iâd like to see more not-forced
diversity, like affirmative action,â Briskey said. âDiversity is a good thing, but it should have to do with how well youâre doing in school.â Out of the ïï,ïïżï students enrolled in JMU, ïï».ï percent, or about ïș,ïŒïïœ students, are from minority groups, according to the JMU website. Virginia Tech and The University of Virginia both have a higher minority population than JMU with ïșïœ.ï» percent (out of ïșï,ïŸïœïč total students) and ï»ïč percent (out of ïșï,ïčïŒï total students), respectivly. Michael Walsh, dean of admissions, said the university does take race into consideration during the admissions process. see DIVERSITY, page A4
>> Fencing club proves to be more than just a sword fight, page B3 ROBERT BOAG / THE BREEZE
A numbers game SGA to collect signatures for Virginia21 campaign to lower student tuition By GEORGINA BUCKLEY The Breeze
Instead of betting on blackjack to pay tuition, SGA encourages students to place bets on a different kind of ïșï. This week SGA hopes to lower tuition by drumming up support for the Virginiaïșï âWhatâs your numberâ campaign. Brittany Tyler, the Virginiaïșï deputy director, said all four-year colleges in Virginia are participating in the campaign to get ïïč,ïčïčïč signatures to support Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnellâs fiscal year budget proposal incorporates an increase in funding for higher education, especially financial aid. âMcDonnellâs proposal is the first in ïœïč years to increase funding for higher education,â Tyler said. SGA President Pat Watral has challenged SGA to get ï,ïčïčïč signatures across campus to support the proposal. âYou ask people about higher education, and they all agree that itâs
1/26 INSIDE
one of the most important things in a personâs life,â he said. âOver the past few decades, politicians have prioritized money to other things.â SGAâs goal is to meet the needs of students and work to solve issues that are most important to them. âIn October, when we surveyed student opinion on school things that are most important to them, students ranked financial aid and tuition No. ïș, â Watral said (aside from transportation). âStudents took about $ïș million in financial aid, just to come to JMU.â Not only will an increase in state funding provide more money for financial aid, but it will slow any tuition raise state schools would otherwise have to do without McDonnellâs budget proposal, according to Watral. âWhatever is not paid for by the state must be made up by private donations or tuition,â Watral said. âIf weâre not getting the money from the state, JMU is going to have to make up the money from somewhere, which means raising tuition.â
A3
NEWS Parking no recreation
Students have perfected their parking-spotstalking skills.
KATIE BAROODY / THE BREEZE
SGA hopes to collect 1,730 signatures for the Virginia21 campaign. âIf weâre not getting the money from the state, JMU is going to have to make up the money from somewhere, which means raising tuition,â said SGA President Pat Watral.
The Virginiaïșï campaign states that tuition could increase by as much as nine percent in the next couple of years without that proposal. SGAâs goal to get ï,ïżï»ïč signatures from JMU students, faculty and staff by Jan. ï»ï.
A5
OPINION Publicly Shmacked?
Online pictures and videos of students drinking will lower their chances of finding jobs.
JMU isnât alone in the signatures campaign. The University of Virginia and Christopher Newport University are just a few of many state schools that have joined. see SGA, page A3
MATT SCHMACHTENBERG / THE BREEZE
An unknown man entered the Copper Beech townhome of junior Catherine Schlegel early Friday morning. By ALISON PARKER The Breeze
In the early morning hours on Friday, Catherine Schlegel awoke to the sound of her jewelry shuffling in her Copper Beech bedroom. She then heard the sound of heavy breathing, finding an unknown man staring back at her. âAt first I thought it was a drunk guy mistakenly coming to our house thinking it was his own,â she said. âHe had a dark gray hoodie on that covered his face.â When it dawned on her that it was an intruder, she immediately jolted awake and screamed. âHe just casually walked out of my room,â Schlegel said. âHe didnât run, which was weird.â Her room is in the basement of the townhome. From there, Schlegel followed the intruder, unable to clearly see him because she wasnât wearing her glasses. âHe knew exactly where he was going even when all the lights were off,â Schlegel said. âHe didnât say anything and just headed up the stairs and walked out the front door, leaving it wide open.â She called the police, who arrived around ïŒ a.m. Police confirmed there was no sign of forced entry. They added there have been several cases where someone who is heavily intoxicated will enter the wrong home. From Jan. ï, ïșïčïï through Jan. ïșïŒ, ïșïčïïș, there were a total of five incidents in off-campus residences similar to Fridayâs, three of which involved the arrest of intoxicated offenders venturing into the wrong residence. The other two were residents â reports of an intruder in their apartments. âThe police didnât know what could have happened or what his intensions were,â Schlegel said of Friday. âThey also thought it was a boy one of my roommates had over, but they arenât like that at all.â Earlier in the evening, her roommates came back to the townhome at different times. Stephanie Veit, a senior international affairs major, arrived home a little before ïïč p.m. âWhen I got home, I locked the door to the apartment,â Veit said. âI went straight to bed and locked the door to my room. They tried to knock on my door to wake me up when this happened, but I didnât hear them.â The second roommate, Sarah McKee, a junior health sciences major, entered the residence shortly after Veit arrived back. âI always lock the dead bolt to the house, so I donât know if I had forgotten.â Courtney McKay, a senior marketing major, was the last roommate to enter the residence at around ïï:ïŒïœ p.m. and found the door unlocked. She immediately came inside, locked the door and went to bed. Schlegel thinks the man somehow entered the residence either between ïïč p.m. and ïï:ïŒïœ p.m. or later into the night. Although the incident happened last week, itâs not far behind Schlegel. She fought with Copper Beech to get her townhouseâs locks changed. see COPPER, page A4
B1
LIFE Dating game
Advice columnist takes to the stage to deliver dating commandments.
B3
SPORTS Threeâs a crowd
Track and field qualifies three relay teams for the ECACs in March.