Page 2-The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 21, 1990 Calvin and Hobbes ByOill W°en° U' hosts program to raise LOOK DoVm I-WE FOR THE momt y" is MY Kum. kill~ i Y 4 Y{OU NEE KNOW N ~OW L06~ ID -WHAM- '(cU GET NtT BM A CEMENT -McK ! 1WIN IO'D KB 2SORR YOUP\T OF 0JR LESRE WTI4S W T& MoN*v&-N 'r4CS YOUR MOTTO ? : ff tS% } TUP Rc>AKU . IUL ' j , I minority representation 0 by Shalini Patel Daily Staff Reporter Nuts and Bolts WEDOt'c*T'SUt IN EAI(N&CACZBa w LtD AN.YONE LjIr= TO SAY SOMEIH-INC? APICMSTYWHSA EA R GE EOCAD W o 14E NATIV/E AERANSIN' j ~ L I rig, by Judd Winick TEDHO Nvi HIM? W(x F GONNA V CAVE -IS1 I END BOY UP?' y i For the second year in a row, the University will host the Minority Summer Institute, a program de- signed to increase African-American, Latino, and Native American repre- sentation among business doctoral students. The institute is scheduled to take place - and will undergo a review process - in June and July. William Broesamle, president of the Graduate Management Admis- sion Council (GMAC), said of U.S. citizens who graduated from business doctoral programs in 1989, only 2.2 percent were African- American, .7 percent were Hispanic/Latino, and none were Native American. GMAC administers business graduate school admissions tests. The program, sponsored by GMAC and the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB), will accept 30 juniors and seniors, the same number as last year, from colleges and universities everywhere. In six weeks, students participat- ing in the summer institute will take two classes - one in economics, the other in organizational behavior - and receive a stipend of $2,500. "This program is not limited to business school students," said George Siedel, the business school's director of affirmative action and a professor of business law at the University. "We're very concerned about this national shortage." "We also view this as an oppor- tunity to introduce students to Michigan," he added. Last year, a national committee accepted 19 African-Americans, 10 Latinos, and one Native American into the Minority Summer Institute. Asian-Americans and other mi- norities are already well represented in doctoral programs at business schools, Broesamle said. Minority faculty from the Uni-. versity, in conjunction with faculty from schools all over the country, will teach at the institute. Last yet the dean of Tuskeegee University and the associate dean of Texas A&M participated in the program. "Michigan was selected from ten competing schools for the opportu- nity to host the institute," said Broe- samle, who would not release the names of the other schools. "It was chosen for three reasons: the signif cant number of minority faculto members, its good doctoral program, and the general support of the busi- ness school and University adminis- tration." Of the 144 business school fac- ulty, five are African American and 17 are Asian American. The Minority Summer Institu, will cost approximately $1.5 miw lion for three years, the bulk of which is paid by GMAC and AACSB. The University pays ap- proximately $.2 million, according to Siedel. " t 1 l I - . p a i I THE GREAT WALL____ RES Specializing in . DINN -CARl Szechuan, Hunan RatE and Cantonese rantof tauran Daily 1990's Arbor1 747-7006 1220 S. UNIVERSITY " AT S. FOREST ANN ARBOR 'TAURANT IERS & LUNCHES RY-OUTS Ann Arbor's best new restau- f 1988 and best oriental res- t of 1989 by The Michigan Weekend Magazine and s Best Take-Out by the Ann News. V ....1! - ! I i" C 4- (3 IZ: VIti Monday -Sunday 11 am-11 pm \ NEXT TO CITY PARKING STRUCTURE FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P.M. I Assembly Attendance The following Michigan Student Assembly members were present for opening and closing roll call at last nights meeting: Angie Burks (LSA) Sreenivas Cherukuri (Engin) Lynn Chia (LSA) Scott Chupack (Engin.) Paula Church (LSA) Bill Cosnowski (Engin) Corey Dolgon (Rac kham) Charles Dudley (LSA) Brian Johnson (Engin) Aberdeen Marsh (LSA) Liz Moldenhauer (Art) Paul Oppedisano (Pub. Health) Susan Richey (Pharmacy) Rob Reilly (LSA) Lisa Schwartzman (LSA) Jonathan Uy (Med.) Jennifer Van Valey (LSA) Hunter Van Valkenburgh (LSA) Aaron Williams (Engin) The following Michigan Student Assembly members were absent for either opening or closing roll call at last night's meeting: Mary Aitken (Nat Res) Stephanie Andelman (LSA) Amy Arnett (LSA) Tony Barkow (LSA) Matt Benson (Business) Stephanie Brown (Nurs.) Melissa Burke (LSA) Jennifer Dykema (LSA) Jeff Gauthier (Rackham) Steven Kahl (Business) Michael Kline (Rackham) Steve Koppelman (LSA) John Lapins (Architecture) Mike Marderosian (Dentistry) Steven McKelvey (Lib. Sci.) Ken Miller (Rackham) David Nacht (Law) Marci Powers (Ed.) Sundar Ramasamy (Med.) Joe Sciarrotta (LSA) Peter Speer (Business) Alene Taub (Music) Tun Thwin (Rackham) IFC Continued from page 1 The passing of this ban is associ- ated with a major goal of the IFC this year - preserving the fraterni- ties' relationship with the adminis- tration. The proposal to ban open parties has been debated for several terms, leading to the Hectorians Meeting Nov. 2 when 36 of the 37 fraternity presidents in attendance voted to support the ban. MSA Continued from page 1 "It may make some votes more conservative," he said. "Action doesn't fall in a block as much (as CC)." MSA President Jennifer Van Valey, who was elected on the Action ticket winter term, expressed optimism about next term's assem- bly, but expected fighting between members of different parties to con- tinue plaguing the assembly. "I think that there will be more political infighting," she said. Both Van Valey and Dolgon ex- pressed hope that MSA would con- tinue to work for the students. "I think this semester proved MSA can do a lot," Dolgon said, citing the work of the assembly's committees and commissions. Dolgon speculated that the work - done by the assembly was not re- Detroit census tops one million mark DETROIT (AP) - Volunteers scouring Detroit for people missed by the U.S. Census counters helped push the city over the magic 1 mil- lion mark needed to retain big-city political clout and federal and state dollars, Census officials said yesterday. Officials have estimated that falling below 1 million would cost Detroit about 16 percent of its an- nual operating revenue of $1.9 billion. Preliminary Census figures re- leased in August estimated the city's population at 970,000, a tally city officials challenged, sending out volunteers to search every street for uncounted Detroiters. NATIONS Continued from page 1 sounding "No." French President Francois Mit- terand likened the new Europe to "yesterday's utopia." Mitterand asked the delegates to "ensure that each of the states pre- sent here enjoys a special quality of relationship based on equality of rights, security, and solidarity." He spoke favorably of an elimi- nation of chemical and biological weapons, the reduction of nuclear weapons, and the hope that "disputes be settled peacefully through concili- ation." In praising a new Pan-European movement towards democracy, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher suggested that the delegates "establish a great alliance for democ- racy. "That would be the best guarantee of all for our security," Thatcher stressed. "Democracies do not go to war with each other - they have too high a regard for freedom and justice, not only for those in their own country, but in each other's coun- tries as well." President George Bush called Eu- rope "A continent frozen in hostility for so long." He seemed confident that the pledge signed here between While the final count still isn't in, Census Bureau Director Barbara Bryant told Mayor Coleman Young that the city hpd topped 1 million. Included in the recent tally were such people as military personnel sta- tioned elsewhere during the first count, Bryant said. "It includes people who miglO have been in a winter home on April 1. That, for example, added 22,000 people to the count," she said. "Hooray, hooray, hooray," Rep. John Conyers said from his office in Washington. "The powers that be fi- nally got the message that the op- pressed, the homeless, and the im- poverished don't always have phones and houses from which to b recorded," said Conyers. the members of NATO and the War- saw Pact to promise "the non-use of force" will be heeded and long-last- ing. "The measures," Bush said, "will contribute to lasting peace through openness." Turkey's President Turgut Ozal concurred, stating that the new order of security in Europe "will irre@ versibly free the European relations from the dominance of the military factor." In singing the praises of the ac- cords and the future of Europe, the leaders also heartily endorsed the ef- forts of Gorbachev. "There would be no summit to- day," said Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, "had it not been fo. the vision and the courage of Presi- dent Gorbachev." Later Mulroney added, "At great risk to himself he opened avenues to cooperation that consigned the East-West division of Europe to history." The only European nation not in- cluded in this conference is Albania, but it was granted observer status and hopes to become a full membeo of the conference before long. This inclusion should accelerate demo- cratic progression in a nation that was once considered the most op- pressive in Europe. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates viaU.S.mail forfall and winter $39 for two terms, $22 foroneterm.,Campus delivery$28.00fortwo terms. Prorated rates:$25fortwoterms; $11 for one term. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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