Page 10-The Michigan Daily- Friday, January 29, 1993 'U' compiles statistics of minority communities by. Nate Hurley Daily Administration Reporter If knowing is half the battle, the offices of affirmative action and minority affairs have taken a ep toward educating the Univer- .s,ty community about minority repruitment.. The two offices jointly pre- pared a statistical profile of fac- u*ty, staff and students at the Uni- versity from 1981-82 to 1991-92. y "I would say that the purpose of this report is to make the infor- mation more readily available so that students could look at it," said Patricia Tomlin, a research asso- ciate in the Office of Affirmative Action. John Matlock, director of mi- nority affairs, said the report was needed to insure accurate informa- tion was available to anyone who was interested. "One of the things we wanted to do is document every table. People can be looking at two sets of data and it depends on when they were produced," he said. The report does not include any commentary, and instead prints raw numbers and a few charts "One of the purposes of the re- port is for people to be able to look at the numbers themselves and draw their own conclusions," she said. Matlock said the report took seven to eight months to compile, but that the process should be shorter for the next edition. The offices plan to print a report on a ! Y tudn Enrollment of minority years. The number of enrolled students, by ethnicity, during fall term 1991: African Americans 2,510 Asian Americans 2,697 Hispanic/Latinos 1,240 Native Americans 189 Whites 25,585 Source: Joint study by the Offices of Minority Affairs and Affirmative Action yearly basis. He said the report clears up common misconceptions about the people who are included in the counts. "A lot of people feel that inter- national students are counted as students of color. That's not true." However, international faculty members are considered faculty of color, he said. Economic upturn is too late for Bush WASHINGTON (AP) - A burst of holiday spending propelled the nation's economy to its fastest growth in four years, the govern- ment said yesterday. But analysts warned the revival will sag without more jobs. The economy during October- December grew at a healthy 3.8 per- cent annual rate, exceeding the 3 percent rate most economists had predicted. However, the best performance of George Bush's presidency came too late to convince voters he should be returned to office. "For ex-president Bush, it's too bad the election wasn't held today," said economist Allen Sinai of the Boston Co. "It's just ironic the economy looks so good in the third and fourth quarters." During the fourth quarter, a 4.3 percent advance in consumer spend- ing accounted for about two-thirds of the growth. Other bright spots included a 9.7 percent increase in spending by businesses for new equipment and buildings and a 29.1 percent leap in housing construction, the best since the end of the last re- cession nine years ago. 0 0 0 ( f F I ~ -.~E P)_ 1 -sr -ah -ctnpA4 y p sntt '4 1 0 0 { t'fce o fAWo PD I lzrQtn fown.jtheiAstreLr Look for it in the (they realy work!) F ,3 :a ,. s Upward bound Books in hand, a student trudges his way to the second floor of the graduate library yesterday. i . School of Public Health students protest elimination of program i 0 n ; d . a , "1 ; f AhA APOVA4 the %LoktF Tricker-s Arc $14t 4$10 'bw^fP CEnter Sfudl~ht s~armit j t6WNll .D. FB 7 0 2@ Cancun amr 7ntsrsodgng $ 424 " Round trip ar from Deftoi , R'und t '"p trasfers"N* ,rot taxe " Free parries "-Free 'caf nhome South Padre H ' " 5 nights resor'tlodging $991 (7nights also available) "Roundnp moloraoec available " Free wv nduing " Free sailing Al resort taxes " Free beach parties- Fr"e'call home' Bahamas CrU-*I 'rom Cruise $299 " 5 nights resort lodging " Round trip 2 daycruise from Ft .Lauderdale . LuuryB eadcronf Location " Free mat'on ship " A N rsort taxes JA"h Ove w IOWA-IN a 004 r* - a t *ay * maSL r Rpur Daily Administration Reporter ,. U-M SCHIOOL OF MUSIC u ve.s it y a nce cotna'+' // V / i 1 t k = - - I ,---- Students in the School of Public Health have been busy ever since they were informed in early January of the School's Executive Commit- tee's decision to phase out the De- partment of Population Planning and International Health (PPIH) by the year 1995. In the past week, PPIH students have: solicited School of Public Health students' signatures for a pe- tition. As of yesterday, they gathered 420 signatures; sent PPIH students Paula Tavrow and Anne Young to address the Michigan Student Assembly during its Tuesday meeting; and, began to contact lawmakers because the proposed closing of the department is likely to cause two government-funded programs to withdraw from the University - the International Population Fellows Program and the Population Envi- ronment Dynamics Project. PPIH faculty members met ear- lier in the week with School of Pub- lic Health Dean June Osborn, Provost and Vice President for Stu- nce you nave a moratorium and you can't admit students, you lose your clientele and the program is already dead.' -- Ruth Simmons Associate professor dent Affairs Gilbert Whitaker and School of Public Health Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Marshal Becker to discuss both the decision to phase out the department and the moratorium placed on all new appli- cations to the department. "We felt as a faculty that we wanted to make our case to the provost because this decision had been made with his consent," said Associate Prof. Ruth Simmons. "Once you have a moratorium and you can't admit students, you lose your clientele and the program is already dead," she said. According to Simmons, Whitaker told the department members he would reconsider the moratorium, but he noted there was another side to the decision to stop admitting new students. Neither Osborn nor Whitaker would comment on the issue. The University's School of Pub- lic Health Students' Association (PHSA) passed a resolution Monday denouncing the moratorium and de- manding an explanation for the deci- sion from Osborn. "(PHSA) uniformly and unani- mously condemns the decision to place a moratorium on the Popula- tion Planning and International Health Department. We question the process by which this decision was made. Therefore, we call for Dean June Osborn to make a public ex- planation for this decision and to fur- ther articulate the procedures used in considering and enacting this and similar decisions," the members stated in Resolution 93-1, signed by PHSA Chair Douglas Rammel. PPIH students arranged a discus- sion of the decision with Osborn, but Osborn canceled the meeting, telling the students it was not the proper time in the procedures to meet, said PPIH graduate student Sarah Thomsen. i THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LAW SCHOOL Thomas M. Cooley Lectures Thirty-ninth Series TAMING THE PAST: HISTORIES OF LIBERAL SOCIETY IN AMERICAN LEGAL ARGUMENT ROBERT W. GORDON Professor of Law Stanford University Lecture I: The Classical Ascendancy (1860-1920) and Its Progressive Critics Lecture II: The Conservative Revival (1980-1992) Lecture III: Designing the Past to Reform the Present 4:00 P.M. February 1, 2, 3, 1993 D i s C 0 v e r Kappa Beta Phi Michigan's newest social sorority! We're going national! Mass Meeting: Feb. 2 at 7pm MLB See you there! For information call the Pan-hel office 663-4505 NOW LE6SING SPRING FEILL 1993 Keystone Properties 608 Packard 663-2284