Wednesday, August 27, 1969 THEVICNIGAN DAILY Page Nine Wednesday, August 27, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pope Nine City, Uprovide unique services During the time you spend at the University - however long it is - some problem may get to be too much for you to handle by yourself. Maybe the draft, maybe money, maybe marriage, maybe some overwhelming emotional hangup. If you find yourself needing help for any kind of problem, many types of services are available - generally at no cost - from both the University and the com- munity. PERSONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL COUNSELING: Counseling Division, Bureau of Psychological Services, 1007 E. Huron. This is one of the most popular - and, overcrowded agencies on campus. The staff psychologists conduct individual and group sessions to help students handle emotional and intel- lectual problems. * Mental Health Clinic, University Health Service. Psychia- trists and psychiatric counselors here offer therapy for mental and emotional difficulties and personality problems, including disturb- ances of the nervous system. Neurologists are also on hand. 0 Office of Religious Affairs, 2282 Student Activities Bldg. Don't let the name fool you. The ORA counselors are ready to help students with any kind of problem, and their services come into greater demand every year. But they always seem to make time to help one more student, and they have a reputation for being there when you need them in any kind of situation. * Private psychiatric counseling. This is often suggested by the free but crowded University agencies for students who need more intensive therapy and can afford to pay private fees. How- ever, the University services will always make room for the stu- dent who can't afford a private psychiatrist. 31ARITAL COUNSELING: * Both the Counseling Division and Office of Religious Af- fairs offer marital counseling. Also popular with students who are about to be married is a three-credit class on the marriage rela- tionship offered in the literary college but open to all students. BIRTH CONTROL ADVICE: 0 Health Service. 207 Fletcher. Staff gynecologists will advise and prescribe for students. You pay only for the actual medication and for any tests necessary. * University Hospital, Gynecology Clinic. Students pay a $10 registration fee, but are then eligible for the same services available at Health Service as well as for any other type of medical assist- ance. 0 Planned Parenthood, 122'2 E. Liberty. The advantage here is evening hours. A $10 registration fee is charged to those who can afford it, but it goes for a good cause: Helping the clinic provide free assistance for those who can't pay. JOB PLACEMENT: 0 Bureau of Appointments, Placement Office. Prospective em- ployers and employes are matched through this office all during the year. A special office has also been set up just to handle teach- er placement. * Part-time Employment Office, 2200 Student Activities Bldg. Both University and non-University jobs are available here. Inter- views match students with job openings, and refer them to other University agencies which may need more student employes. * Summer Placement Service, 212 Student Activities Bldg. Just what the name implies. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE: * Office of Student Financial Aids, 2011 Student Activities Bldg. This is the place to go if an emergency situation develops. The loan office may be able to give you a loan or grant. In addi- tion, the office is full of information on scholarships and grants available. For smaller emergencies, you can also get a loan of up to $50 from the University through this office, with a year to pay back. SPEECH OR HEARING PROBLEMS: *Speech Clinic. 1111 E. Catherine. The clinic will provide speech therapy to students free of charge for minor defects and larger problems, such as loss of hearing. READING DIFFICULTY: * Reading Improvement Service, Bureau of Psychological Ser- vices, 1610 Washtenaw. If there's one thing you have to do at the University, it's read. This service teaches students to read faster with better comprehension and also to study more effectively. Courses, workshops and individual counseling are all available DRAFT COUNSELING: * Draft Counseling Center. 502 E. Huron (Baptist Center. 'Trained counselors are on hand to help students cope with the draft in the best of available ways. The service is free with support coming from student and community organizations, and the center has become a tremendously popular source of advice on the in- creasingly-pressing draft problem. * The Office of Religions Affairs. One of the specialties of the ORA is helping a student cope with both the practical and moral questions raised by the draft. LEGAL AID: 9 Student Legal Services. SGC sponsors a program by which students may obtain counseling from a lawyer at a minimal rate. Contact Mrs. Samuelson, 1546 Student Activities Bldg. for an ap- pointment - 0 Washtenaw County Legal Aid Society, 201 N. Fourth Ave. For real trouble, lawyers are provided free of charge to students - and the community, of course -- through this ,federally-funded service. Legal aid has seen students through all the recent demon- strations. UNCLASSIFIABLE PROBLEMS: 9 Student Affairs Counseling Office, 1011 Student Activities Bldg. This counseling office serves as a clearinghouse for every kind of problem, and refers students to the proper agency or pro- vides on-the-spot help. Specter of draft pervades 'U, By JUDY SARASOHN and MARTIN HIRSCHMAN A cloud of uncertainty hangs over every male student-the fallout of an obscure foreign war and the draft. For some, the pressure is more remote. Some are too tall or too fat, or too myopic to qualify to kill and be killed. Others are just freshmen for whom there is only a 40 per cent chance (sic) that Vietnam will still be around by their se- ior year. Nonetheless, the effects of the draft have spread their tentacles into every phase of life-espec- ially at the University. For example, there was once a time when the dissaffected student could take a year off from school to work out his pro- blems away from the academic community. To do so now would mean forfeiture of the under- graduate's ticket to survival -_ his II-S student deferment. And though it is difficult to assess, the combination of the draft and the war has been cre- dited-with ample justification -as a major cause of student discontent as expressed in the countless upheavals which have recently broken the calm on campuses across the country. For the non-student there is little pressure - he is merely drafted without question. But the educational elite of the na- tion is given a four-year stay of execution, providing all the time he could ever want to contem- plate the alternatives: - Joining Reserve Officers Training Corps in the hope that a pacific desk job will accom- pany the rank of second lieu- tenant conferred at graduation. This is also the rank of squad- ron leaders in the Vietnam jung- les.) - Submission to the draft in the hope that a berth can be found state-side. - Canada forever. Pot: Ti The one true statement that can be made about campus 1969 is this: Pot is here to stay. People smoke it-all the time, all over. They smoke at frater- nity parties. They smoke at. home, with friends, and alone, Some of them even smoke in public. A guy asks you for a light on State St., and you turn around to find him-lighting a joint. For despite the law, and des- pite the meaningless "there- must - be - something-wrong- with - -it - even - though - we can't-find-it" attitude of the American Medical Association, et al, pot has become a way of life around campus. No proof has been established of any damaging side effects from pot, and everyone knows it. Many students have simply i discovered that they get a bet- ter high with pot and would rather smoke than drink beer or hard liquor as their parents do. The University's committee on drugs has taken a drug use sur- vey of students which they are going to have to release sooner or later. But they don't want to, because the survey will in all probability reveal what similar surveys all over the country have been showing: Usage of pot is, to say the least, wide- spread. It's a hard problem for the Ann Arbor police to handle. To establish possession of the drug, police must prove that the ac- cused was carrying pot on his person or had it in his house or car-with his knowledge. It's not enough for a person to be in a place where there is pot being smoked; corhplicity may be cit- Byron Groesbeck, associate dean of the graduate school, ex- plains that enrollment dropped only 26 students more than us- ual during the winter term al- though a drop of 161 more than average had been predicted. Winter enrollment was ex- pected to drop to 8000 from 8337 in the fall, but the actual de- crease was only 176 - mostly draft casualties. "There was no real decrease in the winter term," Groesbeck says, "and there are no signs that there will be an unexpected decrease in enrollment in the fall term." The July draft call is 22,300 -- some 3600 below t h e June call. Groesbeck believes that the decline in the draft will relieve pressure on the graduate school, and that there is now no indi- cation that draft calls will in- crease in size. Veterans are starting to re- apply in greater number than in the past, which Groesbeck con- siders a healthy sign, although there has been no significant rise in their enrollment. Groesbeck admits that some additional qualified applicants are being admitted for the fall to prevent any under-enroll- ment. He adds that without the draft pressure the graduate schools would have been forced to raise selection standards this year to compensate for increased num- bers of eligible students. B u t standards have stayed the same because of the draft and the number of students who simply do not enter graduate school due to draft pressure. But other administrators dis- agree with Groesbeck. Assistant Dean Matthew McCauley of the Law School believes the school will be hit hard in the fall, but does not yet have any enroll- ment figures to indicate this. "We hay lose five or 50," he says. "It's anyone's guess:' The Law School has taken a survey of first and second year students-to determine how many thought the d r a f t would hit them over the summer. And 25 per cent of the stu- dents wrote they thought they would not be coming back in the fall, explains Dean Roy Proffitt. However, although two-thirds of the students returned the sur- vey, the results are inconclusive, he says, because many men do not actually know whether they will return to school. "S o m e men just thought their number was up," Proffitt says. Last year the school was af- fected by the draft at the be- ginning of the term, but for the moment enrollment has not de- creased. Summer enrollment is up from 210 to 245. Proffitt ex- plains that some of the law stu- dents think that their draft boards will leave them alone if they maintain their status in school. There is also the fear in busi- life ness administration th a t the school will not know until the fall how many students have been drafted. "Our experience has been that the men weren't notified until July or August," says L. Lynn- wood Aris, director of admis- sions and assistant to the dean of the school. "The future looks bright now, but the draft could turn on us." In engineering, more and more students are dropping out for draft-deferred jobs. "Almost every boy with a bachelor of science- can get a protected j o b in industry, so why should they go to graduate school?" explains Dean Gordon Van Wylen of the engineering college, Van Wylen also says engin- eering is hurt because the school is essentially all male on the graduate level and cannot in- crease the number of women en- rolled. One alternative to the draft I - Resistance and a two-to- five-year jail sentence for refus- ing induction. - Putting the choice off un- til tomorrow. For graduate students, the de- cision is more urgent, or has al- ready been made. A change in the selective service law in 1967 eliminated almost all graduate deferments. Nonetheless, many graduate students seem to be finding ways out. Although from 16,000 to 25,000 graduate students in the nation have received draft in- duction notices, the University's graduate school has not yet been hard hit. The biggest losses have been in engineering, where the lure ze neweR ed, but actual possession is hard to establish. Convictions for sale of pot are even more difficult to come by. The seller usually must have attempted to make a sale to a police officer in disguise. Because of these difficulties, of more than 40 arrests in 1967, only 15 convictions resulted. And although narcotics laws are stringent, police and courts are generally fairly lenient with first offenders on possession counts. Many escape with pro- bation and fines. But after that, going gets rough. The going price for pot, de- pending on the grade of pot and on how much busting has been going on, ranges from $10 to $15 per ounce. -The average Ann Arbor pot smoker keeps his consumption fairly "small time," says one Detroit pusher, who counts local sorority and fraternity houses as a considerable part of his mar- ket. Pot is sold and kept in small lots. Other drugs are gaining in popularity, but none rank with pot, which has become an ac- cepted social convention. Many students are wary of LSD be- cause of well - substantiated warnings that it may cause gen- etic and lasting psychological damage, although more and more students are getting onto LSD. / Also fairly widely used are different kinds of pep pills, pri- marily benzedrine - bennies - and dexedrine-dex. Drugs are called by all sorts of exotic nick- names, from yellowjackets (nim- butol) to blue footballs (????). The speed family of drugs- S of draft-deferred positions in in- dustry is drawing many students away from graduate studies in addition to those who are actu- ally drafted. As a result, incom- ing enrollment in graduate en- gineering is down approximately 20 per cent for the fall, But in the many schools-es- pecially law and business ad- ministration - there are fears that the draft will finally reach large numbers of graduate stu- dents this summer. However, few administrators believe that any significant number of draft-eligible gradu- ate students will be drafted, al- though official fall enrollment predictions have not been made yet. MIKE and JOE You and Your Dal to0 (asa Nova - pIZZ A, ITALIA and AMERICAN FOOD } YuadYDftoCasa Nova Restaurant & Cocktail Lounge 11 W. MICHIGAN AVE. 483-3027 4 P.M. -11:30 P.M. Mon.-Thurs. & Sun. 4 P*M.-12:30A.M Fri. & Sat. 'U' tradition ampetamines like methedrine- are also gradually coming into wider use, although as in the case of LSD, students tend to be somewhat wary of them and their highly publicized dangers. And every year, there is al- ways a new crop of sources and great highs. One year, it was the banana thing. Another time, students were buying capsules of amyl nitrate "amy" or "popper", a medicine for heart patients, and sniffing it through Vicks inhalers to create a floating sen- sation. Something new is bound to circulate each year, with vary- ing degrees of truth attached to the rumors. It is highly ques- tionable still if anyone ever got high from a banana, no matter how they were baked, broiled, ground or barbecued. T T T T By Pizza Bob OVER 1000 Pizza Combinations including Original Hawiian Pizza SUBMARINES p g gsSUPER Pizza Bob'sSUE Loy's FAVORITE BAR BQ BEEF Hawaiian Style TUNA SALAD HAM SALAD HAM AND CHEESE BUDGET SUB Carry out and Counter Service P177 L oIv and WOW! A three-piece Treasure Chest chicken dinner, plus french fries, for only 79! Larger take-home orders also. Trv a box soon! tsPtILIN ($/PEEOY EPRVICE West of Arborland -Advertisement- The eterna I Reprint from The Michigan Daily, March 16, 1968 truths of Pizza Bob By TORE LEV 0FTEN SOME PEOPLE go unnoticed just because their lives are more humdrum and more usual than ours. Pizza Bob, manager of Loy's Pizzeria at State and Packard, has never been in the public's eye. You might very well ask how a human being weighing nearly 300 pounds and standing only 63 inches high could avoid it. But there are no ballads about Pizza Bob, even though he rolls along as well as the Mississippi River ever did- Bob has a huge, immobile face which in democratic fashion greets little old ladies and hippie-radicals and high school greases and two-headed-six-eyed-Hiroshima mutates w i t h the self-same "What'll it be?" No one, no matter how bizarre, will ever make Pizza Bob blow his cool. Like the provervial tortoise, he works at the exact speed, whether two or twenty are jammed into his little shop. HE IS AN inspiration to all of us hung-up, neurotic students. "Bob, our hockey team just lost 10-0." "That's okay it could have been ll." "Bob, I've been putting in a lot of time at The Daily lately. "I knew someone who worked at The Daily. He had a heart attack and died." "Are you kidding me?" _______________y_______l__I__I__g "Hell no." .., "When are you going to lose 11EAh . 11.' ~ :