The University's search for a successor for Vice Provost for Minority Affairs Charles Moody has lacked student input - especially from minority students. Each February, Americans celebrate the accomplishments of African Americans in Black History month. Kerry Colligan examines why the focus on Black history just 28 days a year. The battle for the lead in the CCHA will be waged tomorrow night when the Wolverines travel to Miami to play the Redskins. Right now, Miami holds a one-point lead over Michigan. Today Partly cloudy High 46, Low 32 Tomorrow Cold, chance of snow; High 22, Low 8 . Jr One hundred two years of editorial freedom .ti Vol Ca, o.7 AnnAbo, icia -Fiay Feruay ,193'993Th.Mihi.n 3il Clinton team hires University employee by Jennifer Silverberg Daily Administration Reporter Hillary Clinton, Al Gore and three cabinet members walked by as she sat in the White House earlier this week. National leaders like these never crossed her path when she worked in the Fleming Building. But times have changed and Shirley Clarkson, former Director of Planning and Communication in the Office of Student Affairs, now works for President Bill Clinton - not University President James Duderstadt. "I was asked to make a contribu- tion, and I'm very excited about the new administration. So how could I resist?" Clarkson said. "Very few people have this opportunity, and it would have been hard to turn down." Clarkson accepted a position as Special Assistant to the President and Associate Director of Presidential Personnel shortly after Clinton took office. She is responsi- ble for helping to fill 3,500 White House jobs now available for appointment. She has taken a one-year unpaid leave of absence from the University to fill this role. Clarkson works in the Old Executive Building, next door to the White House, but she often travels to the office of her boss, Director of Presidential Personnel Bruce Lindsey - two doors down from the Oval Office. Clarkson said she is in awe of the historical significance of the White House. "I'm a history nut and walking into the West Wing for the first time took my breath away," Clarkson said. "When you think of who has walked down those halls, it's pretty amazing." Clarkson left the University in See CLARKSON, Page 2 Family Leave Act arrives on Clinton's desk Members of the Campus Crusade for Christ sing a song during their meeting last night. Christian groups lack diversity Membes question the imbalance in minoily representation by Bryn Mickle While campus Christian groups are stressing themes of unity in their sermons, some members question if they are practicing what they preach. At the weekly mass meetings for Campus C-rusade for Christ (CCC) and Christians in Action (CIA), African American repre- sentation is noticeably lacking. Of 50 students at the CIA meeting, only one African American student. was in atten- dance. Three African American students were present at the CCC meeting of 70 Christians. African Americans comprise 5.7 percent of the total student population, said Barbara Robinson, African American rep- resentative in Minority Student Services. "The lack of Black participa- tion in the groups is definitely a concern," said LSA senior Paul Propson, director of Christians United, an umbrella group which represents the major campus Christian groups. Neno Guarisco, CIA staff member and University alumnus, said, "Our group should be a haven for all races. "Our group is almost all white, but we want more involvement from African Americans and other minority groups." CCC staff member Keith Simon said the campus Christian groups are a reflection of society. "Because a lot of our recruit- ment is through word of mouth, the white membership is then per- petuated," Simon said. School of Education senior Suzette Lawson said the groups simply represent the racial break- down on campus. Lawson is a member of the Labor of Love (LOL) Christian student organization, a predomi- nantly African American group. "I don't think the other groups are being discriminatory, it's just that the religious backgrounds of Blacks and whites differ," Lawson said. Kinesiology sophomore and CCC member Jon Nichols agreed that the groups do not aim to discriminate. "It's up to people to choose a group, we should not have to go out and actively recruit a specific group," Nichols said. LSA sophomore and member of LOL Cunilyah Johnson agreed. "Some people might feel more comfortable to be with their race in their worship," Johnson said. While CCC and CIA members said they want to include more African Americans at their mass meetings, they are still searching for the best way to achieve this goal. "The solution may lie in devel- oping programs that more African American students will find See CHRISTIAN, Page 2 WASHINGTON (AP) - The House gave final approval to the Family and Medical Leave Act 247- 152 late last night. The President is scheduled to sign the bill into law this morning. Yesterday, the Senate over- whelmingly approved this bill guar- anteeing workers up to 12 weeks un- paid leave for childbirth or family sickness, pushing this year's first major social legislation toward President Clinton's signature. The Senate approved the bill by a 71-27 vote after three days of debate. "It's a down payment for work- ing faunilies," Sen. Edward Kennedy ([)-Mass.) said of the bill. "They have an administration and a Congress on their side." But Republicans who opposed the bill on grounds it would hurt business complained that Democrats were ramming the bill through. "We're doing this all because we have a 'photo op' at 9:30 a.m. at the White I-louse," said Rep. Bob Walker (R-Penn.) as the House started its late-night debate. Clinton had asked Congress to hurry on the measure, which was vetoed twice by former President Bush. In addition to granting workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for the birth of a child or a faunily health emergencies, the measures ensures they have the same job, or an equiva- lent post, when they return. Companies with less than 50 work- ers are exempt. Before its final vote, the Senate defeated a GOP attempt to give em- ployers more say on when employers could take half days off for medical emergencies. That provision, identical to one tacked on by the [louse, went down 59-39. With final action, the family leave bill would be the first legisla- tion to pass the 103rd Congress e well as the first to hit Clinton's desk. Because of Bush's vetoes, Democrats said the bill's quick pas- sage would demonstrate the end of legislative gridlock, now that their party controls both Congress and the White house. "For all of the country, and of the Congress, the success of H.R. 1 is a 'Better productivity, a stronger economy, loyal workers, and fair employers will be the result.' - Rep. William Ford (D-Ypsilanti) signal that gridlock is over," said Rep. William Ford (D-Ypsilanti), chair of the House Education and Labor Committee and chief House sponsor of the act. Democrats said it held additional symbolic value as an indication of Congress' priorities this year be- cause the act is designed to help working families. "Family and medical leave act is the first of many commitments we're going to make to work ng families," Ford said. "This bill, when our President signs it, puts them back in the ball game - and better produc- tivity, a stronger economy, loyal workers, and fair employers will be the result." The House passed the bill late Wednesday. It got temporarily sid- tracked as the Senate took a four- hour respite to debate a Republican- led effort to block Clinton's plan to lift the ban on gays in the military. The White House urged the Senate to move forward. See LEAVE, Page 2 Some minorities question Clinton's agenda despite diverse Cabinet by Tanisha Harris and Michaell Crews When President Bill Clinton se- lected a record number of four Black advisers to his Cabinet, he not only enhanced support in the Black com- munity but also brought back spirit to certain sectors of the civil rights movement. While members of the University community are heartened by Clin- ton's goal to make his administration more like America, they are also wary of shouting success too quickly. "Clinton's conscious level in the civil rights issue is much higher than his predecessors' and I expect the Clinton administration is going to be much better than Bush's," said Theodore Shaw, associate law pro- fessor. "We can, in part, attribute this to his wanting his administration to look more like America." George Bush's veto of the Civil Rights Act of 1990, which endorsed the use of racial preferences for mi- norities in employment, left many 1O 1 Clinton Perspectives Civil Rights 'quota bill,"' Shaw said. In its text, the bill "approves the lawfulness of voluntary or court-or- dered affirmative action that is consistent with the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States in employment discrimination cases ... as in effect on the date of enact- ment of the Act." According to Robert Drinan, pro- fessor of law at Georgetown University Law Center, "the central purpose of the bill was the enhance- ment of employment and promotion opportunities for Blacks." Bush vetoed the bill reasoning that hiring based on racial prefer- ences is illegal. He attacked the civil rights bill for two years because he felt that it would force employers to adopt unfair racial preferences. "I want to sign a civil rights bill that is going to hit a lick against discrimination in the workplace, but I will not sign a quota bill," Bush repeated. Bush's veto mirrored his opposi- tion to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 during his Congressional campaign in Texas. This reflection spurred many first-time 1992 voters, such as Tonya Clowney, the chair of the Black Student Union, to formulate strong opinions regarding Bush's actions and future as president. "Bush addressed civil rights from the perspective that no one was be- ing oppressed, and as a conservative, he believed that everyone had their freedom of choice and extenuating circumstances couldn't hold them back," she said. "It's hard to get much worse than Bush, but I prefer not to look that far ahead to just watch and see how things go." However, in a seemingly contra- dictory action, Bush endorsed the Civil Rights Act of 1991, which was similar to the bill that he denounced only a year earlier. Bush has also championed Black causes, including voting for an open-housing bill and heading the United Negro College Fund Drive at Yale University. While minority groups may have warmed to Bush near the end of his term, some have already expressed discontent with Clinton. Although he has been lauded for his attempt at diversifying his Cabinet, several groups - including Asian Amer- icans and Native Americans - question their exclusion from Clin- ton's efforts. "If Clinton wants his Cabinet to represent the United States, he should include other minorities. To take four African Americans and say that he is making a difference is not fair," said Muhammad Mamdani, president of the Indian American Student Association. However, some call Clinton's agenda for minorities "promising." John Ed Brown, president of the Native American Law Student Association, said, "It's promising now, but it remains to be seen what Clinton will do. I know of nothing specific that Bush has done for Native Americans, but Clinton has stated that he's going to make an agenda for Native Americans." citizens doubtful of his intentions for further civil rights legislation and pessimistic about future changes. "Bush chronically manipulated the issue of race in his characteriza- tion of the Civil Rights Bill as a Hartford to consult Kuwait University Constituents have high hopes for Clinton's economic policies by Jennifer Silverberg Daily Administration Reporter At the end of this academic year when students and adminis- trators leave for summer vacation, Miureen T.Hrtford- ice nreide1~nt operate." Provosts and student affairs ad- ministrators from Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other American universities will also travel to Kuwaxit to discuss hither eduica- by Robin Litwin Daily Feature Writer "Read my lips, no new taxes."t The familiar phrase that helped propel George Bush to a presidentialt victory in 1988 may have been the into a shiny new engine of growth." With the inauguration past, and the excitement of the transition dy- ing down, people will be turning to* Clintonomics to get the nation's wounded economy back on track. economic policies. I think that leav- ing the deficit to increase was a problem," Deardorff said. "I think the improved mood of the country ought to be beneficial and help the economy regardless .of wI C