The Michigan Daily- Thursday, November 14,1991 - Page 7 Committee created to study recruitment, retention of minority students on campus by Marcus Olender Now that the University has re- turned to the overall minority re- cruitment levels of 1975, adminis- trators are focusing on retaining the students. Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Gilbert Whitaker has created a new committee to re- view University recruitment and re- tention of minority students. He will deliver his charge to this com- mittee tomorrow. The nine-person committee con- -sists of three students, three faculty members and three University ad- ministrators. Harold Johnson, dean of the School of Social Work, was ap- pointed chair of the panel, named the Committee to Review University ,,.Programs in Minority Affairs and "Services. "We will take a look at both the existing services for minority stu- "dents and the need for services," he said. The committee will investigate cif the University is sufficiently meeting the need for minority ser- vices, and will find more effective ways to fulfil these needs. The committee has not yet con- vened, but Johnson described how they hoped to attain their goal. "We are going to collect infor- mation on how services are struc- tured. We will look at descriptive materials and interview key per- sons," he said. Many offices have been created, centrally and in units, to help mi- nority students succeed at the Uni- versity. All these offices are under the jurisdiction of the Office of Academic Affairs. Johnson stressed that the com- mittee would not just focus on these, but all the minority services that University schools and col- leges offer. Johnson said he didn't know if budget constraints had affected these programs. "Nothing is independent of bud- get interest in this era of scarce re- sources, but that's not why we're doing this," he said. He stressed that the committee is not interested in finding out how to cut down on administrative costs. "We are looking at the status of programs and how to improve them," Johnson said. He added that if the committee happens to reduce costs along the way, that would be an added benefit. Whitaker said he selected stu- dents from a list provided by Mi- nority Student Services. He said he was trying for an equal ethnic repre- sentation of all committee members. Julie Bloch, a junior in the School of Education, said she thought she might have been chosen for the committee because she served as president of the Native American Student Association. Be- cause the committee has not yet met, she said she is unsure what it will try to accomplish. John Matlock, director of Mi- nority Affairs, is conducting an in- dependent study of first-year stu- dents who did not return to the University. "The committee should look at what goes on in academic and non- academic services," he said. Matlock gave the example of those in the Black Greek Associa- tion who have no fraternity or sorority houses in which to hold their activities. They depend heavily on the Union as a meeting place. Their numbers have grown from several hundred to more than 600, which the Union cannot accommo- date at one time. Matlock wants a focus on what happens to minority students from the moment they come to the Uni- versity to the moment they leave. He is against what he calls "the numbers game." To study retention itself, he said, is not enough, because people of color who stay might not graduate, and could just be "floating around." AP PHOTO Doing fine Two-month-old Sarah Kelton appears after her heart transplant. SO YOU'RE GOOD IN MATH The Office of International Programs Study Abroad Information Meeting 1992 Summer Program in Florence, Italy Thursday, November 14 1991, 5:00 pm 180 Tappan Hall This newly restructured program will run June 1 - July 29, 1992. Students will earn 8 - 10 credits. Course offerings will include: Italian Language (Introductory and Intermediate), Italian Renaissance Art in Central Italy, The European Economic Community, Drawing and Watercolor, Architecture and Urban Development in Italy, and Studies in Early Florentine Mannerism. Please join us to learn more about this exciting opportunity. .. 0 0 *... NIVERSITY ePIR0 I.. .L- - PRESENTS: G This holiday season, make sure you get- what you ask for. Let SPIRIT help by sending home, free of charge, a holiday wish list k ~containing what you've always wanted, but : never actually received. Get exactly what you want from SPIRIT at a 10% DISCOUNT. 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