WE V ,4 *t One hundred three years of editorial freedom Vol. CIV N $ 0AnAbr ihgn-Tedy ebur ,19 94TeMcia al Study shows drug use increase By HOPE CALATI DAILY STAFF REPORTER Despite the "Just say no!" campaign, high school students are saying yes to alcohol and drugs. According to the "Monitoring the Future" study produced by researchers at the University's Institute for Social Research, high school students are smoking more pot, dropping more acid and using more stimu- lants and inhalants than their counterparts last year did. Marijuana use has jumped almost 4 per- cent from last year. Twenty-six percent of high school seniors surveyed said they used marijuana in the last year. In 1993, 9 percent of eighth-graders and 19 percent of 10th- graders said they smoked marijuana in 1993. Cigarette smoking is also on the rise for the first time in a decade. "The stage is set for a potential resurgence of cocaine and crackuse," said Lloyd Johnston, the project director. The increase in drug use was mirrored by a decrease in the perceive drugs. "These attitudes and be the dangers believed to be a use of these drugs ... play deterring use," Johnston s begin to soften, as they4 increase in use can be exp Johnston was joined b searchers Patrick O'Ma Bachman in presenting the vey at a Washington news c among high sch d harmfulness of day afternoon. In general, Black students reported the eliefs, specifically lowest rates of use for virtually all the drugs, ssociated with the legal and illegal, and that this was true for all a critical role in three grade levels. said. "When they "This study also shows us that we have to did last year, an increase our efforts to convince young people ected." that drugs are dangerous," said Health and y University re- Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala. lley and Jerald Education Secretary Richard Riley said results of the sur- President Clinton will include a $660 million conference yester- request for safe and drug-free schools in the iol students budget he presents to Congress next week. The government spent $491.6 million last year. This is the 19th annual survey of Ameri- can high school seniors and the third annual survey of eighth- and tenth-graders. The study surveyed 51,000 students in more than 400 schools for a nationally repre- sentative sample and was commissioned by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. - The Associated Press contributed to this report *'U' begins celebration of Black eheritage By MPATANISHI TAYARI FOR THE DAILY It was more than 60 years after African-Americans became recog- nized citizens of the United States that Carter Woodson, a historian and scholar, launched Negro History Week in 1926. * The purpose of this week was to acknowledge and celebrate the achievements of African-Americans who had been told that they were insignificant throughout the entire time they contributed to the building of this country by force and without pay. It was a time of self-reflection, self-upliftment and self-pride. The week-long celebration ex- panded in 1976 to include the entire month of February. This month was chosen because the commemoration would then coincide with the birth- days of African-American scholar Frederick Douglass and President Abraham Lincoln. Black History Month continues to thrive as a national commemoration. The University community is once again coming together to celebrate Black History Month through various. programs that promote awareness of the great and positive impact African- Americans have made to this nation. This year's events will be spon- sored by many organizations includ- ing the Center for Africa and African- American Studies, Housing Special Programming and Minority Student Services (MSS). Many events will be *broadcast on Housing's cable chan- nels in an effort to pique student inter- est in attending activities. Although Blacks are not still de- picted as they were in 1926, many feel that African-Americans have yet to attain full equality. This year's See MONTH, Page 2 A ROOM WITH A VIEW U.S. agrees to possible air strikes in Bosnia WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Clinton administra- tion endorsed a U.N. report yesterday threatening air strikes against Bosnian Serbs while intelligence sources reported 5,000 to 10,000 Croatian troops had crossed into Bosnia. Endorsement of the U.N. secretary-general's report gives new impetus to the threat of air strikes if the Serbs attack peacekeepers in two key towns. U.S. intelligence estimated Croatia was pouring troops into Bosnia-Herzegovina in an apparent attempt to off- set gains by the Muslim-led government's army. An administration official, insisting on anonymity, said this could lead to U.S. moves in the United Nations to impose the tough economic sanctions on Croatia of the kind that has crippled Serbia's economy. German Chancellor Helmut Kohl said he could not substantiate reports of Croatian troops moving across the border in large numbers. But he said if true he would disapprove "very severely and find a way to pour my disapproval into practice." The statement indicates Germany would support the United States in seeking sanctions in the U.N. Security Council. "We talked about a number of possibilities that I wouldn't want to make public just yet," Kohl said later at a news conference. The White House had even less to say, just putting out a written statement saying their talks "covered a range of international and bilateral issues, including developments in Russia, Ukraine, Central Europe, Bosnia and the Middle East. They agreed on the need for vigorous follow-up on NATO summit decisions." Clinton plans to visit Germany in July after the economic sum- mit in Italy, the White House statement said. Lining up with the Clinton administration, Kohl said he opposed any attempt to impose a settlement on the warring parties in Bosnia-Herzegovina. He also regis- tered Germany's opposition to NATO intervening with ground troops. That, he said, would result in a "blood bath" and be "more traumatic and more tragic" than the current blood- letting in the country. ELIZAB ELIPPMAN/Daily Multiple mirrors in the Law Quad reflect the patterns of snow outside and the interior of the Law students-only study room yesterday. Fedchair signals rise in interest rates WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Re- serve Chairman Alan Greenspan said yester- day it's a matter of when the central bank raises short-term interest rates, and he warned that waiting until inflation worsens would only mean harsher rate increases later. "Short-term interest rates are currently abnormally low," he told Congress' Joint Economic Committee. "At some point, ab- sent an unexpected and prolonged weaken- ing of economic activity, we will need to move them." He carefully avoided saying exactly when, but private economists widely expect an in- crease in the overnight rate for loans among banks anytime between next month and the end of spring. It would be the first increase in this fed- eral-funds rate in five years, when the rate peaked at 9.75 percent, and the first change of any kind since September 1992 when the rate fell to a nearly 30-year low of 3 percent. A rise in the rate engineered by the Fed eventually could translate into increases in consumer rates on auto loans, adjustable-rate mortgages and bank deposits. Long-term rates are set in financial mar- kets and would not necessarily be affected by a Fed move. At the White House, President Clinton said "there's no evidence that infla- tion is coming back," but he sounded almost resigned to a modest increase in short-term rates. "What I hope is that it won't raise long- term rates because there is no need to do it. And I hope that the stock market won't take an adverse view because we've still got good strong growth in this economy," he said. The Democratic chairs and vice chairs of the joint committee - Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin and Sen. Paul Sarbanes of Mary- land -- urged Greenspan to postpone any rate increase as long as possible "I think the economic ship is on course. I think steady as she goes is the lesson all of us should draw from the current situation," Sarbanes said. Greenspan acknowledged that many of the forces that restrained inflation to 2.7 percent in 1993, the second best showing in 29 years, will work to hold down prices this year. He noted "upward pressure on prices of a number of industrial materials" and warned it would be a mistake to delay raising rates until after inflation clearly had gotten worse. The Fed's key policy-making panel, the Federal Open Market Committee, is sched- uled to meet this Thursday and Friday to map its monetary strategy for the next six months. *New SACUA chair wins by slim margin City Council, First Centrum Corp. dispute future of Ann Arbor Inn By JAMES RAE CHO and PATRICIA MONTGOMERY DAILY STAFF REPORTERS Tension filled the air yesterday as Othe nine members of the Senate Advi- sory Committee on University Af- fairs (SACUA) cast their vote not only for their next leader but for the future role the committee. SACUA members elected Jean Loup, who is the assistant to the dean nfthe TTniversity ihrarv for M-Oual- elections, expressed concern with the outcome of the election. "Today's vote is potentially un- fortunate for faculty governance. Al- though I hope that is not the case, the new chair is virtually unknown to SACUA ... only having just recently been appointed to fill a vacancy." Loup defended her record saying that she served on SACUA for four years in the 1980s. She admitted that the members nf SACUA have differ- By JAMES M. NASH DAILY STAFF REPORTER The Ann Arbor Inn will fall into city hands a few seconds before a stroke of the pen transfers the down- town monolith to an East Lansing developer. First Centrum Corp. and the City Council appear close to an agreement on transforming the inn to senior- citizen housing. At an informational meeting last night, representatives of the city and First Centrum signaled a willingness to clear the remaining barriers to the housing project. First Centrum's $4.6 million plan has been under negotia- tion since November. The inn, abandoned by its former owners, has been a point of conten- tion between the city and homeless- rights activists for four years. An agreement between First Cen- trum and the City Council would de- vote most of the building's 121 units to low-income senior citizens. The 11-story building would shed its most unsightly features - pillars and a canopy facing Fourth Street. Final agreement on First Centrum's proposal is tied up by a See COUNCIL, Page 2