The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 26, 1990 - Page 5 Detroit 'finds' .120,000 ctize ns DETROIT (AP) - More than 120,000 Detroiters came to their "census" and were counted by city officials, potentially boosting the population, count well over 1 million Mayor Coleman Young said yesterday. "This is ample evidence that there was an undercount," Young said, peering over stacks of census forms collected by volunteers over the last few weeks. "In fact, the city is closer to 1.1 million, if not 1.2 million, than it is to less than a million. If we were {,able to find 100,000, it's a safe bet there are at least another 100,000 out there." The city's goal was to find at least 30,000 people because the fed- eral government's preliminary data showed Detroit's population had fallen to 970,000, dropping it from the sixth to the ninth largest city in the nation. * If those numbers hold up, it would be the first time since 1950 the city has been below the 1 mil- lion mark. About 86,000 census forms, spe- cially marked with "Detroit: Were -.You Counted?" on. the back, were -collected. They represent 121,350 "Ieople who claim they weren't 4ounted by the U.S. Census Bureau *parlier this year. Several other cities across the state and nation are disputing the ,preliminary figures. The implication pf a lower count include loss of con- :gressional and legislative representa- tion and fewer federal dollars. The Census Bureau has until - Dec. 31 to tabulate the extra forms, M make sure there is no duplication and Osubmit the final numbers to Presi- dent George Bush. The city effort included help , from police officers, firefighters and }neighborhood volunteers. Billboards, bus signs and bumper stickers were part of an advertising campaign with the slogan "Come to your census" .encoutaging people to call a special hotline if they hadn't been counted. 0" 'U' seeks Latino studies director by Garrick Wang 11 The University is searching the country for a new Latino Studies Program director who can help the program become a more visible part of the University. An eight-member committee will begin work next month screening applicants and defining the director's responsibilities and role in the pro- gram, which needs to be expanded, University officials said. "I am looking for someone committed to making the Latino Studies Program a very visible part of the University," said English Pro- fessor Alan Wald, a committee member. "Latino Studies is a large field that covers many diverse popu- lations that have changed over a pe- riod of time... we need many schol- ars to provide the breadth in this area." The new director will be involved in hiring these specialists and ex- panding the program, he said. Twelve people have applied for the position which has been open since last September, when Sociol- ogy Professor Silvia Pedraza-Bailey left on a two-term research sabbati- cal. As head of the program, the new director will oversee two professors and help hire new professors, said Professor Walter Mignolo, acting in- terim Latino Studies director. Mignolo, who is also in charge of the director search, said the com- mittee - comprised of six faculty members and two students - will start work in November and begin interviews in January. It will make an offer by the end of the Winter term, he said. Mignolo and English Professor James McIntosh, director of the American Culture Program, have al- ready written letters to distinguished scholars in the socio-sciences and the humanities asking for nominations. They have also placed advertisements in various academic journals. The committee will also explore how the program can be expanded, Mignolo said. Possibilities include expanding the number of courses available and hiring more faculty members, he said. One option for the Latino Studies Program is to become a separate unit within LSA, Mignolo said. This would provide the program with more money. The program is nqw funded by the American Culture Program. "Creating a separate unit is not an easy task," Mignolo said. "It will require agreement among the faculty and the students enrolled in the pro- gram." The LSA dean's office will also have to approve the move. Say Cheese Associate Yearbook Photographer Bob Voisine takes LSA Senior Susan Lehman's photo for the Michiganensian yearbook. They will be taking pictures today on the second floor of the UGLi, and will be back in three weeks. Anti-tax proposals threaten to close schools Associated Press Tough anti-tax proposals in half a dozen states and a radical school- choice scheme on Oregon's ballot have turned Election '90 into a wa- tershed for public schools and col- leges. Educators in California, Ne- braska, Massachusetts, Utah, Oregon and several other states are warning of school district bankruptcies, teacher layoffs and campus closures if tax revolt measures are approved Nov. 6. "We would be on the brink of an educational meltdown," said Harold Reynolds, education commissioner of Massachusetts. Voters there are about to decide on the harshest tax revolt measure anywhere: a proposed $2 billion tax rollback. If approved, it would'be the nation's largest voter-initiated tax cut in history. Taxes and government waste, not schools, are the usual targets of voter wrath in most states. But that is small comfort to school officials, who claim they'd suffer more than most if taxing and spending curbs are approved. Latest opinion polls suggest that the education forces may be beating back anti-tax measures in several states, including Massachusetts. But no one is taking victory for granted. "It seems like the mood of the public is sort of anti-everything,"~ said Chris Pipho, a spokesman for the Education Commission of the States. "Many voters are so blinded by an anti-tax mentality that it doesn't matter what the tax is for," said Richard Novak, director of state edu- cation policy and finance for the American Association of State Col- leges and Universities in Washing- ton, D.C. And all eyes of the nation's edu- cation establishment are on Oregon, where the most far-reaching "choice" scheme ever considered would grant parents a $2,500 tax credit to send their kids to any school, even church-related, or to teach them at home. The Bush administration calls "choice" a cornerstone of school re- form. The National Education Asso- ciation, the nation's largest teachers' union, has been leading the fight to defeat it. It says the plan "could well determine the fate of education for years to come." Polls have flip-flopped, but re-. cent opinion surveys show the choice plan trailing. Among key ballot contests: -Massachusetts Question 3, the proposed tax rollback, has educators talking about closing college cam- Educators in California, Nebraska, Massachusetts, Utah, Oregon and several other states are warning of school district bankruptcies, teacher layoffs and campus closures if tax revolt measures are approved Nov. 6 puses, 5,000 or more teacher layoffs, no new texts or extracurricular activ- ities, even bankruptcy for the poor- est districts. A poll last week for The Boston Globe and WBZ-TV showed 59 per- cent opposed to the rollback. Omaha school officials wafn passage could lead to sharp program cuts, including an end to many sports programs. A second proposition would re- peal a year-old school finance refoin law that shifted the burden of school finance from the property tax to the state sales and income tax. The contest pits educators and landowners who stand to benefit from low property taxes against many of the state's business inter- ests who insist higher sales and in- come taxes would put the state at a competitive disadvantage. Polls suggest a close vote. 101 SELECTIONS FROM FIVE AMERICAN MUSEUMS The Toledo Museum of Art T September 30-November 25 i ~ Tickets: (419) 243-7000 Information: (419) 243-7707 Recorded tour available it it mirn nnnr nnrrr i rk A rnlI E1 dU imirAr'nr nnnimm.YtTii dV Ufk um IU UE U irr nr EinuViV*rUU