F' YJ SEE NE 6 APPf4 CALL .DAdY Spinning and winning Mitch Margo, a Journalism graduate student, doesn't have to worry about any more lonely ijghts, now that he's won a ceramic dog and a white fur throw pillow. Oh, yes, and a $350 china dessert set. Margo went to California over the holidays to see his girlfriend, and ended up as a contes ant on NBC's Wheel of Fortune. In an episode aired yesterday, Mitch won $700 in merchandise and gift certificates to Giorgio's. But Paula from Pittsburgh outspun him and walked off with a sports car and the right to return tomorrow. No need to worry for the University student, though. In Tuesday's episode, Margo won over $7,000 in prizes. He's back in town, and at the end of those long, cold days as a TA, we're sure he can be found curling up on his pillow and sharing desserts with his faithful boxer. Inaccurate report? An article in yesterday's Detroit News caught the eyes of several University administrators. The story describes the contents of a "needs of the University" statement submitted to the Regents by the faculty presidential selection committee last month. According to the article, "The search committee's report to the (University) Regents suggests that the Ann Arbor campus could be strengthened by severing ties with its Flint and Dearborn satellites." This upset cer- tain University officials, especially Dearborn Chancellor Leonard Goodall, who yesterday alleged that the report is inaccurate. Actually, it appears as if Goodall's point is well taken. The actual text of the statement suggests that in the next ten years administrators will need to clarify "the role and relationship of the Dearborn and Flint cam- puses vis a vis the Ann Arbor campus." King 's birthday II Martin Luther King would have turned fifty last Monday had he been alive and we ran in this column an item about a state holiday and local events in honor of the great civil rights leader. We said, incorree- tly, that the University sponsored no special activities to com- memorate the event. A staff member from Abeng, a University sup- ported group, called to inform us that "A Tribute to a Great Man" was held on the evening of Dr. King's birthday in the Residential college with a film and poetry reading. We apologize for the oversight. t3 A;S. > S, .,x Take ten On January 20, 1969 Richard Milhous Nixon became the 37th president of the United States. He pledged "to consecrate my office, my energies, and all of the wisdom I can summon to the cause of peace among nations." Following Nixon's speech, jeering anti-war demon- strators tried to stone the president's car during the inaugural parade. But club-swinging police beat back an attempt by about 1,000 protesters to overrun their lines. Happenings FILMS Cinema II - Stroszek, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild - Young Frankenstein, 7, 9:05 p.m., Old Architec- ture. Ann Arbor Film Co-op - The Big Sleep, 7 p.m., The Long Goodbye, 9 p.m., MLB3. Alternate Action - A Face in the Crowd, 7, 9 p.m., MLB 4. Mediatrics - Rabbit Test, 7, 8:30, 10 p.m., Nat. Sci. Apd. Palestinian Human Rights Committee - The Palestinian, Aud. B, Angell Hall. Chinese New Year Film Festival - Tiger Cliff, Stardust, 7 p.m., Conf. Rms. 4, 5, 6, Union. SPEAKERS Pendleton Ctr. - "Rhyme Space," David Oleshansky, John Lucas, David Thaden, 2 p.m. Pendleton Room, Union. PERFORMANCES Music School - Percussive Arts Society, 11 a.m., noon, 1:30 - 3:30 p.m., SM Recital Hall. Faculty Voice and Piano Recital - Schubert Die Schone Mullerine, 8 p.m., Rackham. PTP - All Shakespearean program, "This Fair Child of Mine," 8 p.m., Trueblood Theatre, Frieze Building. Ark - Louis Killen, English ballads, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. SPORTS Tau Beta Pi - All Engineering Basketball Tournament, 10 a.m., Sports Coliseum. Men's Basketball - Michigan vs. Ohio State, 2:05 p.m., Crisler Arena Women's Basketball - Michigan vs. Notre Dame, 4 p.m., Crisler Arena. MISCELLANEOUS International Center - trip to Henry Ford Museum, Greenfield Village, 10 a.m., - 4 p.m. Rats One more reason not to live in Jakarta, Indonesia. Bridegrooms in the area have been ordered to produce a "dowry" of at least 25 dead rats for their brides before being allowed to marry officially. An of- The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 20, 1979-Page 3' Daily Official Bulletin Students to study health care in China By JOE VARGO In what may be the beginning of a flood of such trips following nor- malization of relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC), 23 students from the University's Ann Ar- bor and Dearborn campuses and Michigan state will travel this summer to visit that country and study its health care system. According to Marilynn Rosenthal, sociology professor at the Dearborn campus and project coor- dinator, the trip to China is the culmination of a course entitled "Health Care and the People's Republic of China." A major goal of the month-long trip, she said, will be to examine the U.S. health care system by comparing it to China's. "ONE OF THE most powerful ways to understand our own culture and health care system is to see it in cross- cultural perspective," she said. "We will use the study of the health care system of China to develop insight into some of the problems and concerns of all health care systems, including our own. "There are certain issues that all health care systems confront. But the Chinese confront some of these issues with a different perspective than we do. That different perspective can be quite enlightening." Rosenthal said the students will visit Chinese institutions which affect health and health care - schools, factories, medical schools, hospitals, and com- munes. She added that the group will also talk to a variety of individuals in- volved with the health care profession. Another goal of the trip is to study the similarities and differences in training of Chinese and American doctors. "CHINA HAS a strong commitment to preventive care," said Rosenthal. "To accomplish this; they have trained thousands of paramedics, 'barefoot doctors,' as they are called. This is an unusual approach as far as Americans are concerned. In America, the em- phasis is on specialized care and the majority of doctors are specialists. There is nothing likethe barefoot doc- tor here." Another major difference in medical training, Rosenthal said,"is that both traditional Chinese and Western medical practices are taught in medical schools in China. In America, we are committed to teaching Western practices only." Among the traditional Chinese methods the group will study is the use of acupuncture in surgery and other medical treatments. During the month in China, the group, consisting mostly of medicine, medical sociology, health care planning and administration, medical social work and nursing majors will stay in four cities: Peking, Shenyang, and Harbin in Northern China and Canton in the South. "OUR CHINESE hosts are commit- ted to showing us as much as possible," said Rosenthal. "Each city has a par- ticular quality that makes it worth studying. Students should be prepared for a very intensive and comprehensive trip." She admitted, however, the cities were predetermined by the Chinese. "We didn't have a lot of choice in the matter," she said. Rostnthal feels the trip to China holds important and far reaching im- plications for the University.d"The University is interested in providing a variety of ways for students to learn," she said. "One way of learning is the traditional way: students attending class and professors lecturing. But another, dramatic way of learning is going overseas to study. In this instan- ce, students will become much more in- terested in thei own health care system. Because of this, the China trip provides an enrichment of their educational op- portunities." Although limited in the past because of strained diplomatic relations, Rosen- thal believes that a greater foreign ex- change program between the United States and China is inevitable. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIX, No.92 Saturday, January 20,1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7,00by mail outside Ann Arbor. Saturday, January 20, 1979 SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB-763-4117 Iverness Country Club, Toldedo, Ohio. Opening for Assistant Manager. Supervisory work for staff and maintenance. WSI or Sr, Life Saving Cert. required. Further details available. Commonwealth of virginia offers a one year internship in State Government Administrative services. Internship begins July 1. Deadline for applying Mar. 9. Further details available. IBM, Rochester, Minn. Summer Program for students completing their Junior year and 1st year grad students. Field open-everything in engr. and systems programming. systems analyst, and applications programming, accounting. etc. and technical writing. Further details available and apps. Dept. of Defense, Virginia. Summer intern program for students who have completed Junior year or better in Political Science (Foreign Affairs & intern. Relations. Deadline for applying Feb. 28. Further details available. Welch Foods, New York. Summer Marketing Inernship. Student must have completed one year of their MBA in Marketing. Excellent opening. Details available. Michael Reese Medical Center, Chicgo, Ill. Summer Medical Research Fellowship. Must have ' completed Sophomore year. Excellent opportunity. Further details available. Deadline for applying Jan. 25. Exxon Chemical Company, Texas. Opening for graduate student in industrial hgyiene-should hve two semesters in organic chemistry and engineering. Further details available. INTERVIEWS: Camp Towering Pines, Coed, Wisc. Will interview here Thurs. Jan. 25 from 9 to 5. Openings include waterfront (WSI), riflery, photography, riding and cook. Register in person of by phone. RABBIT TEST (Joan Rivers) First time on campus. JOAN RIVERS' zany picture about the first pregnant man played by Billy Crystal. RABBIT TEST is an energetic, intelligent spoof on traditional male/female roles. Sat., Jan. 20 Nat. Sci. Aud. Admission $1.50 7, 8:30, 10:00 :t ...... The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 Saturday, January 20 THE BIG SLEEP (Howard Hawks, 1946) 7 only-MLB 3 The original and best screen version of Chandler. Detective (HUMPHREY BOGART) is hired by an ailing, wealthy patriach to investigate the possible blackmailing of his youngest daughter. As Bog ie begins to uncover motives for the disappearance of an old friend, he is led to the father's oldest daughter, LAUREN BACALL: "I like that. I'd like more." Screenplay by William Faulkner. THE LONG GOODBYE (Robert Altman, 1973) 9 only-MLB 3 This fabulously entertaining goodbye to the private eye film is quite unlike any other detective movie ever made-it may be Altman's finest moment. With., ingenious cinematography by Vilmos Zsigmond (CLOSE ENCOUNTERS AND McCABE AND MRS. MILLER) and an impeccable cast including STERLING HAYDEN, HENRY GIBSON, and of course ELLIOT GOULD as Philip Marlowe. "A knock- out."-TIME. Monday: Lubitsch's DIE PUPPE and ANNA BOLEYN Werner Herzog's 1977 St roszek A modern ballad of alienation and isolation, this film depicts the pilgrimage of three German misfits to Railroad Flats, Wisconsin in pursuit of the American Dream.. A street musician (BRUNO S.) convinces his abused pros- titute friend (EVA MATTES) to immigrate to America with him and an old man (CLEMENS SCHEITZ). Once here, life disintegrates into a mish-mash of TV football, C.B. radio and mobile homesteading. It is a tale of pathos and humor. Burno S. (of Kaspar Hauser fame) offers a mesmerizing performance in the title role. German with English subtitles (108m) Sun-D.H. Lawrence's THE VIRGIN & THE GYPSY s Mel Brooks' 1975 YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Brooks' best effort in bedlam brings young Dr. Frankenstein (GENE WILDER) back to the scene of his famous father's research. Don't go to this film if your friends hate the way you tell jokes. "Madeline Kahn is funny and enticing . When-you took at her you see a waterbed at just the right temperature." -Pauline Kael. With KAHN, MARTY FELDMAN, CLORIS LEACHMAN & PETER BOYLE (as the monster). Brooks made it right via black and white. Sun: Arthur Penn's LITTLE BIG MAN Tues: IVAN THE TERRIBLE (Part 1) r a. Wed-Part 2 of APU TRILOGY-Aporojito TONITE at M&9 Angell HaN aud "A" $1 .50 CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 and 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1 .50 WEDNESDAY IS MONDAIS ADULTSFtI.,sAT.,SUN. "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" EE. t I0AYS $3.50 $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED L MA.-THUR$.EE.s $3.0 FORPRICE OF ONE ALMTON1451 I WAYSIDE THEATRE WALT DISNEY'S 3020 Washtenaw "IINOCCHIO" Phone 434-1782 I L- om"', F kk I HAROLD ; RUHGORDON BUD CORTD MON., TUES., THURS. 7-9 FRI. 7-9:25; SAT. 1-3-5-7-9:25 SUN. & WED. 1-3-5-7-9a PQ I