SThe Michigan Daily - Tuesday, Marc 6, 2001 - 7 ducation gap widens at college level for Latinos The Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - The education gap between Latinos and non-Latino whites is nar- wing at the high school level but growing wider at the college level, the Census Bureau reported yesterday. In its annual statistical portrait of America's diverse Latino population, the Census Bureau said Latino adults are more than three times as likely as non-Latino whites to be high school dropouts. And they are also nearly three times less likely to have college degrees. Overall, 57 percent of Latinos 25 and older are high school graduates, compared with 88 percent of non-Latino whites. About 11 percent of Lati- nos have a college degree, compared with 28 percent of non-Latino whites. Within the Latino population, there are differ- ences associated with their country of origin. Those of Cuban origin have the highest levels of income and education, while those of Mexican origin have the lowest relative income and educa- tion, the survey said. The Latino high school graduation rate has shown a steady improvement, climbing from 53 percent in 1995, when the rate for non-Latino whites was 86 percent. The Latino college graduation rate rose from 9 percent in 1995, when the non-Latino rate was 25 percent. Comparisons for prior years are not applicable because survey methods and ques- tions were changed in 1995. The review of the fast-growing Latino popula- tion is based on interviews and research conduct- ed in March last year. The survey of Latinos is separate from the 2000 census, whose results will be released this month. About two-thirds of America's Latino popula- tion is of Mexican origin, the report found. About 14 percent are of Central and South American origin, 9 percent of Puerto Rican ori- gin and 4 percent of Cuban origin. The percentage of college graduates ranges from 23 percent among those of Cuban heritage to 7 percent for those of Mexican heritage. Sonia Perez, deputy research director for the National Council of La Raza, a Latino research and advocacy organization, said she found the educational differences between Latinos and whites to be "quite striking." Perez called for a major expansion of state and federal spending for education. "We need to close the gaps in education, with programs we know are effective, like Head Start," Perez said. "We need to start really early, a need that was underlined by the Census Bureau's finding that 36 percent of Latinos are younger than 18, compared with 23 percent for non-Latino whites. The Census Bureau found that nearly 23 per- cent of Latinos live below the federal poverty line, compared to nearly 8 percent for non-Latino whites. (The poverty standard is about $16,000 a year for a family of four.) The gap was greater for those younger than 18, with 30 percent of Latinos living in poverty compared with 9 percent of non-Latino whites. The census reported that blacks remain the largest minority group, with 35.5 million people, or 12.8 percent of the population. Latinos rank second at 32.8 million (11.8 percent). Population experts believe Latinos will become the largest minority group sometime this decade. pot *Music lovers find alternatives to the slowly dying sounds of Napster.com Up, up, damn s 4. :4 5 q Tle Los Angeles Times Controversial song-swapping ser- vice Napster Inc. began blocking access to thousands of copyrighted songs this weekend, but users quick- ly discovered that the company's fil- tering program is full of holes and that most songs are still available. Just hours after the blocking pro- gram was put into place, Napster subscribers began saving their MP3 music files with slightly misspelled song titles and band names to cir- *umvent the company's attempt to police itself. Rock act Metallica, for example, has now become "Matalica," and the act's popular track "Enter Sandman" has been dubbed by thousands as "Enter The Sandman." Fans are also flocking to "transla- tor" Web sites, where they can type in the name of an artist or song title and learn what permutations are being used on Napster. "Consumers will not be thwarted," said Bruce Forest, vice president of the media entertainment and com- munication practice at Sapient Corp. "People want their free music and, when the protection is so weak, they're going to fight back and get it." Napster announced last week that it would begin blocking access to copyrighted songs after a federal appellate court ruled that the compa- ny, based in Redwood City, Calif., could be held liable for copyright infringement and that an injunction was warranted. Napster attorney David Boies told U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel in San Francisco on Friday that the company would launch its song- blocking initiative over the weekend, preventing an estimated 64 million users from accessing certain tracks. Now the court will decide if Nap- ster's solution is thorough enough or if stricter measures have to be taken, such as shutting down the service. "Napster's plans looked good on paper, but results are all that matter," said Anthony Berman, a San Fran- cisco-based entertainment attorney who specializes in new-media issues. "In court, good intentions don't mean anything." Indeed, the fight over who will police Napster - and how it will be done - continues to be hotly disput- ed. The issue is expected to be debated Friday, when Napster, the record labels and music publishers are scheduled to meet with a court- appointed mediator. SHOOTING Continued from Page 1 Zuckor, 14, and Randy Gordon, 15. The wounded students were identified as Karla Leyva, Barry Gib- son, Scott Marshal, Travis Tate-Gallegos, Trevor dwards, Melissa McNulty, Raymond Serrato, Heather Cruz, James Jackson, Triston Salladay and Matthew Heier. Two adults, security guard Pete Ruiz and student teacher Tim Estes, were also wounded. The shooting began during a short break between the 1,900-student campus' first and second class peri- ods, during which many students move between classes and others are arriving on campus. At first the strange popping sounds coming from a boys bathroom near a campus quad seemed too incongruous to be gunfire. At the first shouts that they might be gunshots, many students laughed it off. OBut as others began to fall and blood flowed onto the concrete quad, the shooting became too real. "He went fire-happy basically,' Heather Noble, a 15-year-old sophomore, said of Williams. "People were tripping over tree trunks, throwing backpacks and screaming, running. There were a lot of 'Oh my Gods."' It was as if, Noble said, someone had sprayed water on a line of ants. "People were running all over the place," she said. "That is what it looked like ... ants." It was the nation's deadliest school attack since two Columbine High School students in Colorado killed 12 classmates and then themselves two years ago. Expressions of regret and anger poured in from around the country. In Washington, President Bush called the shooting "a disgraceful act of cowardice." California Gov. Gray Davis, whose wife once attended the school, said the attack hit particularly close to home. "Sharon and I are shocked and deeply saddened by this tragedy," he said. Authorities said they had no evidence that anyone aided Williams in the shooting rampage. They said that under a new state law approved by voters last year the suspect would automatically be tried as an adult. Because the crime involved a multiple killing, he would be subject to the death penalty. Like many other schools in the wake of recent school shootings, Santana had tried to prepare itself and be on watch for troubled students. But despite that work on campus and seemingly ample warnings about the troubled youth, it appeared that school offi- cials had never been told about the threats. Williams had spent Saturday night at the home of a friend, Josh Stevens. Stevens' mother's boyfriend, who was in the home that night, said yesterday that he had heard the boy threaten to go on a shooting rampage. But the boyfriend, Chris Reynolds, said later that he couldn't be sure the boy was serious. Reynolds said he warned the youth that he would call sheriff's deputies if he got any inkling he would follow through. "I should've stepped up even if it wasn't true and stuff to take that precaution," said Reynolds, 29. "That's going to be haunting me for a long time; that's going to be with me for a long time. It just hurts, because I could've maybe done something about it." Authorities would not confirm a report from anoth- er of Williams' friends: that the young man's father had several guns, apparently locked in a gun case. He had told some friends that these were the guns he would use in the shooting rampage, said Dustin Hop- kins, 15. But then he would back down, saying he was joking and that he didn't even have a key to get to the weapons. JOYCE LEE/IDaily The crew for the Royal Shakespeare Company work on the stage lighting at the Power Center yesterday in preparation for next week's performances. 0 the michigan daily Leaping flnn Nrbor in may?' on't get stuck with an unwanted summer lease! Let AtIJd OdJO UiItj Classified Department ease your subletting woes with our special Summer Sublet publication eadline: Wednesday, March 14, 4pm Cost: $37 if placed by March 9. (add $3.00 for color) $40 if placed between March 12-14 (no color option) e accept cash, checks, money orders, VISA, MC or AM EX Make checks available to the Michigan Daily Mail form, or bring in person to: The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 o student discounts No refunds CHENEY Continued from Page ± when Cheney will return to work. "That'll be a judgment the vice presi- dent will make (Tuesday) with his doc- tors," he said. Cheney checked himself into George Washington University Hospital, about six blocks west of the White House, after feeling chest pain on Saturday and Sunday and then again, twice, yesterday, Reiner said. He said the episodes were "much milder and very brief" when compared with the chest pains that Cheney suf- fered in November. "The symptoms were subtle" this time, Reiner said. Cheney attended a birthday party for Federal reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan on Sunday night, capping a weekend in which he and his wife moved into the vice president's resi- dence on the grounds of the U.S. Naval Observatory. They also sold their town- house in McLean, Va. In Monday's angioplasty, doctors inserted a flexible tube into the nar- rowed artery carrying a collapsed bal- loon. Once the balloon was in place, it was inflated, reopening the artery. During the procedure last November, one of Cheney's heart arteries was 90 percent blocked, so doctors implanted a wire scaffolding-like device called a stent to push away the blockage and prop open the artery walls. Reiner said that following such stent procedures, there always is a chance of renarrowing - and this is apparently what happened to Cheney. The doctor said scar tissue within the stent caused the renarrowing. Aides said Cheney, who was working at the White House yesterday, had told Bush in the morning that he was experi- encing discomfort in his chest and planned to be examined by a doctor. Cheney has had four heart attacks, the first when he was 37. In 1988, he had quadruple bypass surgery to clear clogged arteries. Reiner said Cheney probably could fully return to his work "later in the week." Reiner said the vice president had been "exceedingly diligent" in follow- ing both dietary and exercise recom- mendations, including essentially eliminating red meat from his diet. "He has very nicely adhered to what we wanted him to do," Reiner said. After Cheney arrived at the hospital yesterday, he underwent a cardiac catheterization to determine what was causing the chest pains. In that procedure, doctors insert a flexible tube into a leg vessel, and it is run from there up to the target artery supplying blood to the heart. At that point, dye is injected. The dye shows up on an X-ray or fluoroscope, enabling doctors to see the flow of blood through the artery. LIVING WAGE Continued from Page 1 labor organization supported the living wage because of the benefits it offered workers. "Every public entity has a respon- sibility to pay its workers and con- tracted workers above the poverty line," Romer-Friedman said. "It is indefensible for the Univer- sity of Michigan or the city of Ann Arbor to pay less," he said. Romer-Friedman added that many students rely on city jobs to offset the costs of their education. "As students we have a duty to stand in solidarity with all workers and Ann Arbor to promote livable wages," Romer-Friedman said. The Ann Arbor City Council also' passed a resolution requesting ther University to study the impacts of: the living wage. "This is a golden opportunity to. allow us to look at it (the living, wage)," Johnson said. "No one can be absolutely certain that the benefits outweigh the risks." Johnson said if studies show the living wage has an adverse effect 6n the city, the council would revisit the issue in a few years. - TICKETS Continued from Page 1 LSA sophomore Bill Johnson said. "I don't know what their financial situa- tion is, but it doesn't seem that bad off that they need to raise prices - espe- cially for students." As an LSA senior, Ken Stroger said he is not as concerned, because he will not be purchasing tickets for,! next year. He is more accepting, of the possibility for an increase. "You can't run a program if you don't have any money," he said. "It's not like they're that unrea- sonably priced, even with the increase compared to other schools." Advertising Production Associates needed GRAPHIC DESIGNERS COMPUTERIZED LAYOUT ASSISTANTS SCANNER COORDINATOR BLI ZZARD Continued from Page 1 ceries, snow shovels and videos, strip- ping shelves bare in some stores. "It's like they're never going to eat again," Mavis McLynn said as she shopped at a supermarket in Philadel- phia. The heaviest snowfall from the slow-moving storm was expected today, but by yesterday a foot or more had already fallen in upstate New York and northeastern Pennsylvania. Elsewhere, sleet and freezing rain glazed sidewalks and highways. Meteorologists warned that the storm could be similar to the blizzard kids at home. In Boston, some 62,000 youngsters got the day off. Philadel- phia schools closed early, and hun- dreds of thousands of students were sent home. Airlines canceled hundreds of flights at the New York metropolitan area's LaGuardia, Kennedy and Newark airports, and more than 400 flights were called off at Boston's air- port. Swissair grounded flights that would have carried about 1,600 pas- sengers to and from Europe yesterday. Despite days of warnings from fore- casters, some travelers wound up stranded at airports. "I've been here so long it seems like years," said Joshua McKinley, 21, -1 L ppl-