Iq -r L..., K A :.. M:- M-: 3.. T L........,C A A ...... L. 4n 4^^n n k RESEARCH Minority health conferenxe ill discuss health care The 12th Annual Minority Health Conference is scheduled to be held tomorrow and Saturday at the Pierpont Commons on North Campus. This year's focus will be "Re-emerging and " Emerging Public Health Issues in Communities of Color: What Have We Learned? What are We Learning?" The conference, to be hosted by the Public Health Students of African Descent, will feature three speakers, a research symposium and a variety of workshops dealing with issues includ- ing recruiting people of color to schools of public health and the deliv- ery of health care services in multicul- tural settings. Scheduled speakers include Larry ;Warren, interim executive director of University Hospitals; Aida Giachello, director of the Midwest Latino Health, Research, Training, and Policy Center in Chicago; and Robert Mayberry, director of the Morehouse Medical Treatment Effectiveness Center. Public Health Dean Noreen Clark said "the Minority Health Conference has been a tremendous success from its inception 12 years ago. It focuses on exceedingly important public health problems and attracts leaders from around the country as guest faculty." 'U' to offer environment class In an effort to educate about the past, present and future of the environment, the University is offering a course titled "Homeplace: Life in the Huron Valley" to 19 University students. The goal of the project is to study the Huron Valley as a microcosm to learn how to interact with the environment Son a global scale. Students enrolled in the course will examine scientific studies, historical documents and nature writing to learn what the Huron Valley was like in the 1820s when it was first being settled. The course is being taught by Paul Webb, SNRE associate dean and pro- fessor of biology, and geological sci- ences Prof. James Walker. WU' researchers predict grim economic trends If the uniform national homestead ,exemption suggested by the National Bankruptcy Review Commission is adopted by Congress, the number of U.S. households filing for bankruptcy vould increase by 100,000 per year, said University researchers. The number of households filing for bankruptcy is already at a record high - 1.3 million. The researchers also estimated how economic trends affect personal bank- ruptcy decisions, based on information gathered in a 1968 Institute for Social :Research study. igh school tudents study arithmetic at 'U' Michigan high school students with dn interest in advanced mathematics have the opportunity to enroll in an *;ntensive math program at the 'University this summer. The Math Scholars Summer rogram, sponsored by the department f mathematics, will provide the stu- dents with access to advanced com- puter facilities and small, state-of-the- art courses. The program is designed to chal- lenge high school students who find their high school courses too easy by providing them with material at a depth to which they have not yet been exposed. The courses scheduled to be offered *over topics ranging from the nature of infinity to codes and secret messages. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Sam Stavis. L CAL /STATETne iicnigan uaily - nursaay, Marcn , 19s -A Teleconference delvesinto diversity issueS 1 By Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter Provost Nancy Cantor attempted to restate the University's position on diversity as she spoke as part of a six-person panel that discussed issues of diversity and affirmative action during a video- conference yesterday. "All of the students we take are highly qualified to be at the University of Michigan," Cantor said. "We are looking for a diverse group of students to enliven our environment." The videoconference, titled "Recruitment and Admission Dilemmas in Higher Education: What's Next for Students of Color?" featured six pan- elists, including Cantor, Don Brown, commission- er for the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board; Anthony Carnavale, vice president of the Educational Testing Service; Joyce Smith, execu- tive director for the National Association for College Admission Counseling; Bob Schaeffer. director of the National Center for Fair and Open Testing; and Bradford Wilson, executive director of the National Association of Scholars. It was mediated by Carol Randolph, a Court-TV anchor and attorney. "I think this was a wonderful debate," said Lester Monts, associate provost for academic and multicultural affairs. "Many of the ideas and val- ues on both sides of the issue came about. It was one of the more positive discussions on the ... merits of affirmative action I've seen to date." The conference, sponsored by the publication Black Issues in Higher Education, discussed vari- ous aspects of affirmative action in higher educa- tion, including the necessity for diversity in educa- tion and alternative methods of reaching out to stu- dents before college. "We need to continue the strong partnerships that universities, like the University of Michigan. have with K-12 public schools," Monts said. Wilson, whose organization opposes the use of race as a factor in admissions, agreed with the majority of the panel that elementary and secondary outreach programs, in which students often visit university campuses, are a replacement for the use of race as a factor in the admissions process. "I don't think there is a quick fix. I don't think affirmative action was a fix." Wilson said. "There are only long-term solutions and that is K-12 reform.' The decision in the Supreme Court case of the Hopwood v. The University of Texas Law School eliminated the use of race as a factor in college admissions in the state of Texas. Brown and his associates currently are trying to create alternative methods to keep the student populations of Texas colleges and universities diverse. "What the Hopwood decision has made us dois to seek race-neutral methods that can be used in all areas of higher education," Brown said. Brown said that by the year 2010, the population of Texas will primarily be composed of latino/a an'd black citizens, which is reflected in the increasing enrollment of those minorities to Texas schools. "The future health of our state depends upon the future health of our minorities," Brown said. "Overall, Hispanic enrollment continues to climb, black enrollment continues to climb and white enrollment continues to decrease." The panelists discussed the use of standardized tests in the admissions of undergraduate students. "If we try to do this exclusively on the hard data ... we still have more qualified students than seats," Carnavale said. "No one who makes stan- dardized tests would encourage anybody to make a decision based solely on that test." Regents to hold monthly meeting on Dearborn campus By Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter The University Board of Regents is scheduled to hold its monthly meeting today at the University's Dearborn campus. During the regents' annual visit to the Dearborn campus, they are scheduled to meet with the Dearborn Citizens Advisory Committee and tour the campus. "We're looking forward to them coming to the campus," said Dearborn campus Chancellor James Renick. "We're delighted that they have a chance to see the progress ... that has been made." Recently, the board approved plans for the construction of multiple buildings on the Dearborn campus, including an environmental center. The design for the campus' College of Arts, Sciences and Letters Building, budgeted at $30.4 mil- lion, is currently being looked at by the regents. Regent Olivia Maynard (D-Goodrich) said she is confident her colleagues' concerns about the design and construction of some of the buildings on the Dearborn campus will be alle- viated at this month's meeting when the board meets with the architect. "I'm sure everything will get resolved when we're down there on the Dearborn campus," Maynard said. Maynard added that Renick sent ample material to the regents during the past month, answering many of the board's questions. "That's always really helpful," she said. Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) compared the visit to the Dearborn campus to an ancient Chinese proverb: "You can't see the little wildflowers from the back of a gallopibg warhorse;' Power said. "Being there will give us a better view of what is going on. Most of us are relatively familiar with the Dearborn campus." "They need some more information and we're responding with some additional information;" Renick said. "They're very interested in hearing from the architect who desigi'd the building." The regents also will review the annual Report ;en Investments, 'which will allow the board to assess finanglal decisions made in the past year - including the largest podls of invested capital. "It's a subject for review and discussion," Power siit. "I'm interested in seeing how our performance in mn- aging our endowments stacks up against other univesi- ties." Maynard said the annual Report on Investments given to the regents is always fascinating and informative. A proposal for new scoreboards in Michigan Stadium Nas originally scheduled to be presented at today's meeting, but was not placed on the regents' official agenda. "There will probably be a discussion on the proposal onthe new scoreboards," Power said, adding that there has been dis- cussion about whether or not the proposal will be brought to the board. - Daily Staff Reporter Katie Plona contributed to this repelt. DANA LINNANE/Daily Patricia Coleman-Burns, the director of multicultural affairs at the School of Nursing, speaks on the tensions between African and African American women at the School of Nursing last night. TensionS extens1ve between Afncans and e0 By Rachel Edelman Daily Staff Reporter Patricia Coleman-Burns decided she would not leave the United States unless it was to first visit Africa. When she finally traveled to the continent with her son, she said she found that the tensions and cultural differences existing between Africans and African- Americans were extensive. Coleman-Burns, the director of multicultural affairs at the School of Nursing and a Nursing assistant professor, spoke to a small and intimate group last night about issues of race, class and gender in relation to black women, in an address titled "Black Women in the Diaspora: Issues of Class." "There is a growing strain that exists between African American women and people from Africa," Coleman-Burns said. "There are real debates going on between African Americans and Africans about the tensions." Coleman-Burns said the ten- sions that exist between African Americans and Africans are a result of distance and separation. "One of the things that we have to understand is that there is a dif- ference in experiences," Coleman- Burns said. The address was part of a black women's history celebration for Women's History Month along with was organized by the African American Programming Task Force, along with other groups and individuals. "We wanted to make sure that we covered the whole spectrum of issues," said LSA junior Shannon Muir, who organized the event. Coleman-Burns said it is diffi- cult for Africans and African Americans to comprehend the other group's respective struggles. "The Africans don't understand the 300 years of oppression that African Americans have undergone in the U.S.," Coleman-Burns said. "Except for colonization, much of their culture is still intact.' Coleman-Burns discussed media perceptions of blacks that are often inaccurate and the diffi- culties that blacks face due to a perceived responsibility of repre- senting their race. "That woman on welfare, in the eyes of the media and the U.S., is the same as me and you." Coleman-Burns said black women "are judged by the least of these women, no matter what your education" or social class. She said that one of the largest dif- ferences between the issues that black and white women face in their struggle for equality is that "that kind of class mobility is not allowed for African American women." Muir said the event was impor- tant because it recognized that "black women exist in large num- bers throughout the world." , ILIII IL~WI At What's happening in Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS Q Arab-Jewish Cultural Awareness Group, 764-7962, Frieze Building, Room 3050, 7-9 p.m. ; Circle K, 7634755, Michigan League. Third floor. Koessler Evu1ENS SERVICES J "Free Lecture: 'Recognizing Our True Source of Success," Sponsored by The Christian Science Org anization, Michigan League, Kalamazoo Room, 7 p.m. Q Campus Information Centers, 763- INFO, info@umich.edu, and www.umich.edu/~info on the World Wide Web U "HIV/AIDS Testing," Community Angell UGLI 8:30am 6!~m 5:00pm i1:OOnm I