ACllaemy program 18�a .. t8fr n d-"'�- In fact, of the study . to cted by WSU psychology proll Cary Lichtm.n, Alan B Joel Aacr indicate AfricaD-Ameri 0 fiDiah' scbool • ... e IM2iIRel of 3.0 or bcttct are . . more likely to drop out of college than th o comp e high school with GP As lower than 3.0. . b if things go planned, 60 Wayne State incoming fresh- en, 0 could be at a ris of dropping out of college, will recei a boost through a new program designed to increase their chances of successfully completing school The Summer Academy and Skills Self Enrichment Program (SASEP) at WSU is one of only a dful in the country that tar- ge de whohavebeen d- mitted to college under regular dmissio policy. At Wayne State, the normal dmis ·0 procedure requires uden to h ve a high school cumulative grade point average of at 2.75 on a 4.0 scale. Stu- dents m also have an Acr com . e score of 21 d SAT composite of 850. e program, funded with a $75,000 grant from the Michigan Department of Labor under its Michigan Youth Corps Blue Ribbon Project, was developed a direct re ult of the WSU _ study. During the period tudied , orne 57 percent of Afric n-American students who entered WSU dropped out before graduating . . According to Murdic Coleman, who chairs the SASEP Task Force, the program was constructed under the premise that a number of factors other that academic achievement influence a student's decision to drop out of college. Those factors, he says, are often difficult to pinpoint. "We know what many of the solutions re," says Coleman, who is director of the university Computing Center, "but the source of the retention prob em is more difficult to determine.· Participating students were recruited by WSU based on test re and high school pre para- Veterans of the Vietnam Era neeeding individual, group, family, or vocational. I counseling; job and career development, and assistance . th V.A. Benefits, the 0 Park Vet Center can assist you no matter here you live. Our counselors have been there and know the problems you face. call (313) 967-0040/41. RJR a· 0: Committed to Education • A century of support for minority education - including millions of dollars nationally for scholarships, faculty and facilities - from Richard J. Reynolds' personal g. in 1891 to help establish historically-Black Winston-Salem State University to the cornparr,ls $4- .. grant to WSSU ttis � • A major contributor to the United Negro College Fund since it was created in 1944, and a founding member of its -Million Dollar Roundtable" • Dedicated to improving K-12 pub ic education t1J funding innovative programs through our $3O-million ext Century School Fund, w ich this year awarded many of its first 15 I P grants to school with predom'nately ni(lOlity studel)t bodies AUGUST 12.11, RECOGNIZES NO I LIMITS TO LEARNING. , IR�BISCOI NABISCO BRANDS, I C. PLANTERS LIFESAVERS COMPANY R.J. REV OlDS IDBACCO CO R Y PrrwiiJ, Our Commitment ... E '" D6f. African-American ach· avers share a common trait: a profoUnd commitment, an inner drive. that lets nothing stand in the Wdy of education. Because they know that education is critical for success. f4. RJR Nabisco, we share that drive for educational opportunity. So that fNery African-American son and daughter can achieve the potential within th�m. PAG 1 I. : •