The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 22,1979-Page 3 111_ O YMS E NES {APPEI4 CAL W ZD "~ Luck and aprayer TheLord may work in mysterious ways, and the FM airwaves may just be one of them. Early yesterday morning George Jordan, an all- night prayer deejay for Detroit-based WFBG (located just to the left of WABX on your FM dial) received a call from a woman who asked that we all pray for a young born-again woman named Allison who lives in Ann Arbor and was scheduled to take a chemistry exam yesterday. "She's very anxious about this exam, and she's kind of fractured," said the called of Allison. "Yes, Ann Arbor's a big, fractured place and fellowship is necessary," said Jordan. Then, he asked that we all pray for Allison. After a long string of Lord-be-with-sister-Allisons and Lord-guide-sister-Allisons, Jordan narrowed his plea. "Lord, we ask that you be with her in the chemistry exam and that she get a good night's rest, and that her mindbe made sharp." Amen. Why be second best? Dearborn, that lily-white suburb that borders Detroit's west side has long been criticized for alleged racial discrimination in housing prac- tices. No one, however, has suggested divestment in corporations doing business in Dearborn. But in the throes of yesterday's Regents meeting, which concerned University divestment from firms doing business in South, Africa, Regent Robert Nederlander (D- Birmingham) asked Acting Dearborn campus chancellor Bernard Klein: "Hey Bernie, what are you doing here? We're not talking about Dearborn today." Klein, however, responded, "I know. But South Africa's the next best thing." A rising star English Prof. Eric Rabkin appears to be soaring through the galaxy of the University administration at super-sonic speed. At 33, Rabkin has been named LSA associate dean for long range planning by the University's Regents yesterday. Famed for his well attended science fiction lectures, Rabkin might be expected to bring some major in- novations to the college. When asked if his administrative visions in- cluded cross-campus space shuttles, however, Rbkin chuckled and said his plans are "shorter range than that." The $10, 000 salute Two flags flew yesterday on the front porch of the University president's house on South University St., adding to its air of quiet dignity amid the bustle of central campus. The two flags - Old Glory and the University's own flag - were hung in honor of 300 members of the president's club, holding their semi annual gathering in town this weekend. The cereffitial t'otch seems to be deserved, since each member of the president's club has donated at least .$10,000 to the University. Care to join? Happenings' FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op-The Man Who Loved Women, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. Cinema II-Performance, 7,9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Guild-The Buddy Holly Story, 7, 9:15 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Alternative Action-The Adventures of Robin Hood, 7, 9:15 p.m., Aud. 4,'MLB. Mediatrics-Clockwork Orange, 7,9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. SPEAKERS Inst. Continuing Legal Ed.-Prof. James White, fall faculty workshop, "Current Problems and Banking Law", 9 a.m., 116 Hut- chins. Institute for Public Policy Studies-David Aaron, deputy assistant for national security affairs, "The National Security Council Decision- Making Process", 9:30 a.m., East Conference Room, Rackham. Macromolecular Research Center-Dr. James O'Reilly, FTIR Spectroscopy and Calorimetry of the Amorphous State," 4 p.m., 3005 Chemistry Building. PERFORMANCES Mirage dance troupe-"Terraqueous Incantations" multi-media presentation, 8:30 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. WCBN-FM-46 hours of music of John Coltrane, midnight. SPORTS Football-Michigan vs. Kansas,1 p.m., Michigan Stadium. MEETINGS Ann Arbor War Tax Dissidents-noon, Wesley Lounge, Methodist Church, State and Huron Streets. Disability and Independent Living-Rights of the Handicapped, 1 p.m., Washtenaw Community College, Room 1904 SCB. MISCELLANEOUS National Organization for Women - Pro-choice rally, 9 a.m., Lan- sing. Hillel- Rosh Hashanah Services, Conservative service, 9 a.m., Power Center, Orthodox, 9 a.m., Hillel, reform, 10 a.m., Hillel. Artists and Craftsmen Guild - Fall Art Fair, 10 a.m., Union groun- ds. Michigan Union Arts-- Open House, 10 a.m., Union. Canterbury Loft - Starving artists sale, noon-6 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332S. State. Supermarket picket- in support of Ohio farmworkers' strike and Campbell-Libby boycott, meets at 11 a.m., Union. Pro-soul-Disco Explosion-9 a.m., Union ballroom. i ALISON AND a friend experiment with real doctor's equipment and a "patient" at Mott Children's Hospital. Getting better s not so bad at Mott Hospital By MARY GAITSKILL No one likes going to the hospital. And while the emotional trauma of an operation can be difficult enough for mature adults to handle - for children the anxiety can be acute. C. S. Mott Children's Hospital in the University Medical Center is among the first in the country to recognize this and to tailor its program accordingly, says Dean Lidgard, director of the hospital's school. THE HOSPITAL is observing the ten- th anniversary of its opening this week by explaining how hospitalized children need care, according to Sylvia Coolidge, administrator of Mott, Holden and Women's hospitals. Lidgard said children typically fear permanent separation from their mothers. But, he continued, children can also fear they are being operated on as punishment, or because they aren't good enough as they are. Sometimes, said Lidgard, they're afraid the operation will change them so much their friends will no longer like them. He said a child may recover from an illness, but "suffer the trauma of hospitalization for years." TO COUNTER this reaction, Mott has instituted several policies new to hospital child care. Lidgard said hospital staff encourages family in- volvement, including parents sleeping overnight in the same room as their children, and sibling visitation. Children also wear their own clothes in- stead of pajamas, go to school, and hang their art work up with the graphics. Lidgard said the staff always ex- plains to children why they're in the hospital and what is going to happen to them. This is also new-Lidgard said doctors used to believe it scares children to discover what is happening to them. Actually, he said, uncertainty magnifies a child's fear. For example, he continued, an X-ray machine can seem terrible to a child if he doesn't know what it is. Lidgard added that children are never told an operation "won't hurt," another old practice. "They're able to examine all our equipment and ask questions. They can see being hurt and sick is part of life, not something to be frightened of. It's the unknown that scares them." LIDGARD ALSO said terminally ill children are treated as if they're going to continue living. "After all," he said, "we're all terminal." According to Coolidge, Mott mixes children suffering from leukemia and heart disease in with other young patients. "They're put together by age, not illness," said Coolidge. Mott is definitely institutional in ap- pearance. The color scheme is mostly beige and white, and the design regulated. But, for a hospital, there is an abundance of colorful graphics and, large windows. And the hospital children notice this. "It's all right here," said 10-year-old Alsion, "but I'd rather go home." A shy, pretty blond, Alison is recovering from an operation for a disease, the name of which she doesn't remember. She said she was "a little scared" by the idea of an operation, and that she appreciated having the procedure explained to her. When asked if anything at Mott stood out to her as interesting, she said, "no. They have school and shots here." _Seventeen-year-old Sherry, who has been in and out of Mott since she was 8, described the hospital as "all right," although it "really scared" her at first. She has been there so often, she sees the other patients as "friends like at school." She said three of her Mott' friends have died since she has been coming there. Craig, a well-spoken 13-year-old with' a very serious illness, said, "I wasn't scared when I first came, just a little' nervous." He said he got over that pret- ty quickly, and that now he thinks Mott is "real nice ... All the art work here is unique, and they have a lot of stuff to' do. They really have it together here." An articulate, clear-eyed 9-year-old named Elena said, ."I like the nurses: and everything, but it scares me. I've> had three operations, and had pins removed from my hip. I'm glad they. told me about everything. "But it was still worse than I thought. it would be-well, no," she said, ; changing her mind. "I thought it would be really scary and it wasn't so scary. I was operated on for a disease in my hip, and I was in a body cast for a whole month," she added rather proudly. Senators meet in closed session to review draft WASHINGTON(AP)-The Senate went behind locked doors yesterday to hear secret details about manpower problems facing the armed forces in wartime and arguments for com- pulsory draft registration. For nearly three hours the public and press were excluded as senators reviewed the outcome of a Pentagon test pointing out the armed services' equipment and personnel shortages. IT WAS THE Senate's first secret debate since May 15, 1978, when it was considering the sale of U.S. warplanes to Egypt and Israel. Yesterday's closed session was requested by Sen. Sam Nunn, (D-Ga.), to bolster his case for registering young men for a military draft - an idea that appears to have died in Congress this year. Faced with a 252-163 House vote against registration and a threatened filibuster in the Senate, Nunn said he would settle for a debate on manpower shortages and would drop his campaign for passage of a registration bill until next year. NUNN'S BILL, opposed by the Carter administration but supported by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the nation's top military body, would require registration of all men between the ages of 18-26, beginning next January. Senate leaders agreed Thursday to Nunn's request for a secret meeting. At 10:30 a.m., Nunn requested that the Senate go into closed session, and the presiding officer ordered the sergeant at arms to clear the visitor and press gallaries and lock the doors. Eight senators were present at the time. Nunn sought the session after Defen- se Secretary Harold Brown refused to lift the secrecy stamp from details of a 1978mobilization exercise called Nifty Nugget. The senator, chairman of the Armed Services manpower subcom- mittee, argued that Nifty Nugget un- derscored the need for registration. SEN. WILLIAM COHEN, (R-Maine), a member of the manpower subcom- mittee, said he also had reviewed the classified material, but had not come to Nunn's conclusion that registration would solve problems that were un- veiled. The test, largely a paper exercise, showed problems in mobilizing enough National Guardsmen and reservists on short notice, mounting a big enough airlift to the fighting front and getting standby ammunition plants into production quickly, according to Pen- tagon sources. Sen. Mark Hatfield, (R-Ore.), who had threatened to filibuster to block registration, said the closed session did not persuade him to change his position. Describing the closed session, Hat- field said the sergeant-at-arms was sent out after the doors were closed to roung up enough senators for a quorum - half the 100 members. The attendance quickly dropped to about 45 senators and had dwindled to about 15 at the end. "That so many drifted off was in- dicative there was skepticism . . . or they felt we weren't going to reach my conclusion," said Hatfield. , Nunn argued that registration alone would not solve the military's man- power problems, but said it would cut three months from the time it would take to mobilize new recruits, complete training and make them available for duty. Chorus Men Needed For the Comic Opera Guild's production of PERICHOLE AUDITION Sunday, Sept. 23 at 1:00 pm at First Methodist Church corner of Huron & State-3rd floor FOR INFO CALL 665-6074 New Wineskins Workshop 0 Learn how prayer and meditation can -help you handle stress -help you deal with sickness/pain -help you become a more effective person " Learn how your dreams -lead you to inner wisdom -open up your unconscious creativity us LA - Mm* ut. ss.a.... . - - - TONIGHT at RICK'S- STEVE NEWHO0USE and the HADTASTE HAND lnin pis after