ott o OlT-Mu ic. M ic. Mu ic. In one cn e of the word, the orld of Dorothy R. Simp on i mu ic. She h owned nd oper ted Si mp OD' Record Shop, 14034 Jo C mp u, for the p t twentyfour ye Sh has een the progre ion of recorded mu ic evolve from 4S , 33 , four tr ck , ei ht track d It to CO' . Mu ic! with it tyle nd trend h ch nged too. When he opened Simp on' Record Shop, the MoTown Sound wa , a the young ter ay, "pop­ ping." She old lot or the Tempt tion , Smokey Robinson, the Four Tops, Stevie Wonder nd Aretha Fr nklin. She has wi tnessed the popularity of Rhythm & Blues, Soul, Jazz (with its different branches: Straight Ahead, Fusion, Modern nd 0 forth), Rap, and the revival of "mu ic you can 1 isten to." SHE HAS ALSO een trend, a t lea t t Simpson's Record Shop, that has moved towards the popularity of gospel. She said, "If the shop has a speciali ty, it's gospel." But Simpson's worl pas es much more than mu Her conversation isn't sprinkled 'with the Top Ten, Billboard or MTV. She is interested in-because it's her business-"livelihood"­ in who' hot. "But she is much more concerned about tier neigh- Alice Simp on The mother of ix children and grandmother of ten, Simp on ha , from the domain of her hop, be­ come a fo ter parent to many. "I LOVE THE youngster and I eally want to ec them do well," she said, adding, "I sec no bad children, You can m ke a child your friend or you can make a child your enemy. I have no children problems" They re pect me and I respect them." However, Si mp on doe not look at the world through rose tinted gla ses. She said, "What bothers me the most i the youngsters not wanting to get an education. " MU IC. MU IC. MU IC. Simp on' Record Shop h not only been a ource of livelihood, it been a teachi ng tool too. The record hop, which also ell needle', 'cigarettes and orne undry item , provided "the fir t job" for Simp on' ix children and today her grand on Lonnie Simp on Jr. and daughter-in-law Alice work in the hop. She i al 0 a is ted by two of her foster children, ister Neicy and Mary Jone. Her husband, C lvi n, retued from Gener I Meters. comes in "occasionany." Simp on's Record Shop motto is: "If we don't have it, we will try to get it. II And in adition to cas eues, CD and albums, the hop has eight tracks and a smor­ gasbord of 45 . By LATONYA SMITH Capital News Service I , LANSING-If the war in the Persian Gulf continues to esca­ late into a full-fledged ground battle, Detroit Receiving Hospital could temporarily lose some of it staff to the conflict. A 2-member civilian volun­ teer team of doctors, nurses'; and a respiratory therapist from the hospi tal has been assembled and put on alert that it could be called on to help with medical efforts with five days' notice. But that has left some fearing that the hospital won't be ade­ quately staffed if the trauma team (is called on and then hospital nur­ ses who are in the reserves are called up also. Dr. Susan Hershberg Adel­ man, president of the Michigan State Medical Society and a Detroit pediatric surgeon, said that if the reserve-n,rses, in addi-' , lion to the trauma team are ac­ tivated. there could be a shortage. "Receiving Hospi tal, has over 20 nurses in the reserves Inthe critical care units and if they're all called up and then t�ey se,nd out the trauma team, they re going to be decimated," Adelman said. Nancy Fiedler, spokesper on. for the Michigan Hospital A - sociation, said that the possible effects of the call-ups aren't known yet, but most hospitals are suffiCiently staffed to handle leaves. She added that most 'hospitals would cover vacancies . with pa t-time and ful l-t ime staff. /' "Right now, there's not a dra tic impact." Fiedler said. "I cer­ tainly wouldn't characterize it as a drastic Shortage by any means." Adelman said that doctors who would be working in the 'military field hospitals would have very modern equipment to work with and as long as there were no Shortages of supplies, most would adjust easily. "They have up to the minute equipment and depending on the quality of the trauma team, you could do anything and rather easily." Adelman said. Although trauma center across the country have been asked by the U.S. Defense Department to assemble critical care teams,. Adelman said that Detroit Receiving was one of the first asked to as emble a team. Dennis Archambault, public relations director for Detroit Receiving Hospital, was unable to give detailed information about the rauma teams other than that if called upon, they would be used at a military hospi­ tal in Europe. Detroit Receiving Ho pital and it affiliated University Heal th Ce nter is a 340-bed trauma hospital with patients in the Detroit tri-county area offer­ ing critical care capabilities. 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