Belief in oneself fuels program SEATTLE. Wash (AP) — On a fall morning. 14 students sit in Room 227 studying civics The lesson are i itizenship and leadership The issue is i him mg gum Students are about to vote on whether they should be allowed to chew and pop gum in class Any where else, gum-chewing students would have been ordered to spit out the rubbery mass and that would have been the end of it But a democracy, oven in a classroom, helps instill respect in many kids who have never experienced it. This is the philosophy that fuels the Belief Academy at Rainier Beach High School At the acadurny. 2fi students diagnosed with learning or behavioral disabilities are taught using various techniques from integrating math and English to rowing in the middle of Lake Washington. The students enter in seventh grade and remain in the academy until they graduate from high school. It's all in an effort to keep them in school On average. 40 to 50 percent of such students in the district drop out — twice the overall district dropout rate, according to a 10-year study by Eugene Edgar, a University of Washington special education professor and a founder of the Belief Academy. "It is a research project where we have taken a single cadre of kids to see if we can keep them in school longer than students with learning disabil ities in regular district programs," said Erosyne Mensendick. Seattle School District's director of student services. Of the civics class, teacher Joe Thaler said: "These students need < onstant but positive rein fon oment because a lot of them have never hail guidance." To Ik* sure, Belief Academy is about more than feel good classroom teaching Charles Gilbert. IS. lives with his 2.1-year-old sister and two nieces. His mother is dead and he doesn't know where lux father is. Charles has been at the academy since seventh grade when he arrived from Denny Middle School with numerous school suspensions and a fierce altitude Last year, he polished off trigonometry and this year professes to actually like homework It s .ill about belief in yourself "The concept of Belief is that (teachers) come in believing in the students, the students Ixigm belies mg in the mac ti ers and onlv then can they ixdieve in themselves, said Ernest Johnson, n supervisor of the 4-vear-old program. "Try to think of an example where one could be successful without believ ing in themselves In 1489, Seattle was one of three c dies given a SI million five-year federal grant to raise the aca demic a< hievement of spec ml education students and stem their burgeoning dropout rate The school district matched the federal grant with another $1 .5 million in teat,hers and supplies over five years. Of the district's 4.100 special-education stu dents, most have specific learning disabilities and a few, roughly 10 percent, an- labeled seriously lie ha v i ora 11 v disordered The program at Rainier Beat h is broken into two components, one centering on careers and appren ticeships and the other on at ademics The students in the academic track are dis bursed in regular classrooms throughout the dis trict. They take study skills classes and attend school on Saturdays at the University of Washing ton. There also are 20 seventh-graders enrolled in Project Belief at Denny Middle School While it is too soon to measure the program's effectiveness there ant some early indicators. The students' absentee rates have gone down and their California Achievement Test scores, while not going up. have not decreased either. "We have some early indicators of success with regards to parent satisfac tion and students' will ingness to attend school." Mensendic k said. Three hundred yards out on Take Washington where the bright sun bounc.es off the water, acad emy students am learning to row Alxd Alefaio, 14. is the coxswain Ho is a leader but he listed to be a runaway and gang member. "I had some find friends who always wanted me to make had decisions but now I'm turning 'em down I tell them I have to get my grades up." Abel said. At the end of the 1994-95 school scar, the pro gram's money will run out. Supporters hope the district will pick up tile cost Whatever happens, in Room 227. a c ozv class room full of books and computers, sit 14 students who believe in themselves. Bombarding rocks scare neighborhood SPOKANE (API — For nearly four months, residents of sev en homes in ihe same neighborhood have been frombarded day and night by rocks that have broken windows, chipped chim neys and hurt two people Police say thev know who's responsible for the aerial barrage in the Wost Central neighborhood. But some BOO flours of investigative work, including night time stakeouts and use of special night vision equipment, have failed to turn up evidence needed to bring the culprits to jus tice. ''I've done everything I cnn do,” says Detective Terry More house. "I have no place to go. It's nuts." The projectiles have ranged from small stones to rocks as big as grapefruit. Some days, just a few rocks are seen or heard slamming into houses and yards, while on others the number tops 100. Police say two people, including a child, have been hit and injured. A flower pot was shattered out of a woman's hands, a dog was hit and windows and vehicle windshields have been broken with regularity. Last weekend, a rock broke the windshield of a patrol offi cer's police car. While physical damage is estimated in the thousands of dol lars, there's also been a human price. Brian Parks called off a backyard birthday party for his son on Saturday when the rock onslaught began. "When it gets quiet for a while, all you can do is go hysteri cal waiting for more rocks to fall," said a resident who gave her name only as Francine. Police believe the projectiles are fired from sophisticated slingshots and large launchers that use surgical tubing. The rocks are shot from outdoor hiding places, dark windows and an alley near the targets. Morehouse believes the offenders have nothing better to do than terrorize their neighbors. Before an arrest can be made, police must catch the culprits in the act. prosecutors advised. Officers have hidden in bushes and used as many as six video cameras at a time. Probable witnesses have not cooper ated. and a $500 reward offered for information in the case has gone unclaimed, police say. "They know they can't get caught." patrol officer Sue Mann said. what's OUt what's m Dial It instead of “0" and save up to 44%. for icof &Mno> goUaa calk V» ATtn ofruat Oalad 3 am icunuu call