One hundred ten years ofeditorialdfreedom NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www.michigandaily.com Thursday November 30, 2000 I --4 ~ -K I *Minority rates p for class f 2004 By Usa Koivu Daily Staff Reporter Although underrepresented minority numbers in this years freshmen class have risen, according inumbers released by the University yesterday, the overall percentage of minorities at the Uni- versity has decreased. This year's freshman class has a total of 5,418 students, of which 14.5 percent are listed under the category of underrepresented minorities, which include African Americans, Hispanic Americans and Native Americans. This percentage is up from last year's entering class, which was made up of 11.4 percent under- represented minorities. Lester Monts, associate provost for academic affairs, said the University does not set provisions for the numbers of students per racial category. "We set targets for the overall number of stu- dents desired, but we don't have any targeted goals or quotas for underrepresented or majority students,' Monts said. Also rising this year is the number of students enrolled who chose not to list their race on the application. "There are a lot of questions about that," Monts said. "There are a lot of issues dealing with affirmative action and students may not want to indicate race." While it is estimated the number of students wishing to attend college will be on the rise until 2010, Monts said he is unsure whether the Uni- versity will dramatically increase enrollment numbers. "The reason we keep enrollment at this partic- ular level is to make sure we have the resources to provide students with the best education we can provide," Monts said. "If we go over this number it produces an environment not con- ducive to what we want to have." Monts said the decrease in the overall number of underrepresented minorities is a retention issue which the University is trying to remedy. "Our ability to increase our enrollment is con- strained by our resources including the number of faculty; infrastructure issues such as class- See ENROLLMENT, Page 5A Minority enrollment for class of 2004 Total enrolled freshmen: 5,418 African American: 472 Hispanic American: 276 Native American: 39 Asian American: 724 White: 3,298 International: 207 No Indication: 402 'U' Prof. receives $8 million for study Professor to study the effects of diversity on African American life By Lisa Koivu Daily Staff Reporter After conducting a survey 20 years ago on African American life n the United States, University psychologist James Jackson has the opportunity to repeat the survey with an $8 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health. Jackson, director of academic pro- grams in the Center for African Amer- ican and African studies, said the study will last four years and will look at the impact of diversity on about ,000 African American's across the nited States at the start of the 21 st Century. The study will target four differ- ent groups - African Americans, African Caribbeans, European Africans, and African American and African Caribbean adolescents currently living in the United States. Jackson said it is significant for #frican Caribbeans to be involved in the research because they are not often involved in large studies. "This is the first time to our knowledge that anybody has done a national study on this group," he added. Jackson said relatively few of the interviews will be conducted in Ann Arbor. "We will be going all over the continental United States in areas vhich have been scientifically selected," Jackson said. "We'll be sending teams all over the country. They'll be trained here and then relo- cated." Della Hann, a spokeswomen from National Institute of Mental Health said the institute was interested in funding the study because of the speci- ficity of the subject. "We are in the process of launching everal large surveys and Dr. Jackson wanted to provide more detailed infor- mation on African Americans," Hann said. "We are moving into the 21st Centu- ry and it is important for Congress to have as accurate of surveys as possi- ble,' Hann said. "Now we will be able to do that in a much more informed way," Hann said. Jackson said the study will be used o affect public policy in a variety of ways. "This study will be used to under- stand what African Americans think about a variety of things," Jackson said. Hann said the $8 million grant Jackson received is large compared to others that the institute has pro- vided. "That's a very large grant, but it's important to remember that figure is spread over a five-year period," Hann said. Jackson said he is the amount will fulfill the objective of the study. i ihmilon Allnare isaot of OUTTA THE CLASSROOM Dispute could last weeks The Associated Press Al Gore raced between TV interviews yesterday asking, "Will we count all the votes or not?" while his lawyers urgently sought a high court ruling with the answer he wanted. Both Democrat Gore and GOP rival George W Bush pressed forward with separate blueprints for building a presidency. "On Jan. 20, a President Bush will be ready to take the reins of the government," said top adviser Andy Card -- awarding his boss a title that Gore still hopes will be his. Bracing the public for more legal wrangling, the vice president said he was pre- pared to fight until "the mid- dle of December" and suggested the dispute could drag past the Dec. 12 dead- line for appointing state elec- tors - to six days later when the Electoral College meets. With the stakes so high, the Republican-dominated Flori- da Legislature inched closer to securing Bush a backup plan: House Speaker Tom Feeney said yesterday he is con- vinced lawmakers need to go into special session as early as next week to name its own slate of presidential electors. And Senate President John McKay agreed that was a "rea- sonable conclusion." Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, the candidate's brother, said he would sign the necessary legislation "if it was the appropri- ate thing to do." Still, with the recount case headed to the highest court in the land, Jeb Bush said, "The United States Supreme Court trumps the Legislature." Gore himself told CNN that Florida voters would not stand for "the expres- sion of their will taken away by politicians." Gore is trying to overturn official results of the decisive Florida election before the public's patience runs out on the 22-day ordeal. "I certainly believe that I did" win the White House, Gore told NBC. Needing a quick court victory, Gore authorized his divided legal team to ask the Florida Supreme Court to recount contested ballots or order a lower court to do it, two Democratic legal sources said late yesterday. One million ballots were being hauled 400-miles from southern to northern Florida, where the precedent-making case has been thrust upon a circuit judge in Tallahassee. "Pack em up and bring 'em up," Judge N. Sanders Sauls said. Bush planned to meet today with retired Gen. Colin Pow- ell, his still-to-be-announced choice as secretary of state. Powell has told associates that if offered the post he would accept. The Texas governor also was calling GOP congres- sional leaders, telephoned one conservative Mississippi Democrat himself and assigned his staff to call other Demo- cratic lawmakers as Gore struggled to keep his party in line. See GORE, Page 7A ABBY RO$ENBAUM/Daily RC junior Andy Wiginton Andy Wiginton and LSA sophomore Shoshana Glick rehearse for the-play "Peer Gynt" yesterday afternoon. Experiential classes offer alternatives By Anna Clark Daily Staff Reporter LSA senior Stephanie Romano went home from her final day at an Ann Arbor elemen- tary school last week with an armful of glue- sticked construction paper cards, each, scrawled with markered good-bye messages - as well as memories of "one of the more rewarding experiences" of her life. Romano spent the semester teaching Ann Arbor history to fourth and fifth graders. She worked on a team that regularly put together new methods of making stories of the past come alive for their young stu- dents. "I learned something myself everyday I was there," Romano said. But Romano wasn't just a teacher in this project; she was also a student. The teach- ing experience resulted from her class, UC 313: "Community Projects through the Arts and Humanities", taught by associate Archi- tecture prof. David Scobey and scheduled again for next semester. The class is one of many experiential opportunities for students to enroll in each semester. Experiential classes offer active alternatives for students to tran- scend the typical textbook and exam class structure and instead learn by doing. In Scobey's class, students work in teams and focus on a "culture-building" project that involves collaboration with the commu- nity, Scobey said. He added that the class also meets "seminar-style" to discuss issues of public culture. "Students are analyzingculture while also adding to the culture of the commu- nity," Scobey said. "They learn how they can transform the outside world," he said. "This gets you out of the monotonous setting of the University," Romano said. "You can get isolated here, I think. But this kind of class shows you that all that you are learning here is really leading you some- where." This semester, students in Scobey's class worked on projects ranging from teaching poetry in Ann Arbor elementary schools to Detroit restoration. Lloyd Hall Scholars Program Resident Fellow Joseph Gonzalez teaches LHSP 113 titled "Get On the Bus 2001: In Search of the American Civil Rights Movement." While it's in the LHSP, the class is open to all University students. Gonzalez said that See CLASSES, Page 7A Tying the knot Cold weather causes influx into shelters By Louie Meizlish Daily Staff Reporter With temperatures expected to drop as low as 21 degrees during the following week, local homeless shelters are shift- ing gears to cope with the problem of increasing demand for shelter from the cold. "No matter who you are, you need to have a roof over your head," said Ellen Schulmeister, executive director of the Shelter Association of Washtenaw County. The problem, she asserted, has been exacerbated by the fact that "much affordable housing has been shut down." But, she added, the shelter association "is dedicated to pro- viding housing to people, especially people with drug and alcohol problems." The shelter association currently has a day center - known as Ashley Place - for members of the community who need shelter during the day. They also have two night shelters where the homeless can sleep. The men's shelter at JUSINNFITZPATICK~/Daily Shelter employee Latish Sample (left) interviews Marketa Thomas a client at the Ashley Shelter. cots and busses overflow to local churches, such as St. Andrew's Episcopal Church on Division Street. Another 25-bed shelter is planned to go up at 314 Huron St. Groundbreaking on the new shelter is scheduled for Dec. 14, according to Mark Roby, community development manager for Washtenaw County. The new shelter is a joint development project between the county and the City of Ann Arbor. ME } - .X~ . E