CONTOCT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. * includes a second pair of hard lenses Dr. al C. Uslen, Optometrist 545 Charch Street 769-1222 by appointment Ann Arbor's Second Chance welcomes tRO AYERS Page 10--Thursday, February 1 1979-The Michigan Daily Honors report cites financial problems Tuesday, February 13 Shows at 8 & 10:30 Tickets $ &50 advance Tickets at: Discount Records U-M Ticket Office The Second Chance Wherehouse Records- Ypsu A A .& AAA... AAAAAAL..L.i...A J bw iiiiiir6iis-M&W lrl r'i ° '1 ' -- SUW~f* CEDAR POINT AMUSEMENT PARK, Sandsky,* Ohio. will hold on-campus interviews for * summer employment: * Dates: Wednesday, February 14 Thursday, February 15 * Time: 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Place: 3200 Student Activities Bldg. Over 3,200 positions available for a wide variety of jobs. Dormitory or apartment style housing available. Contact Summer Placement Office for informa- tion and appointment. Spend a sum- mer in one of the finest resort areas * in the North. t A * a a A A A A A 1a 1 A L A -A A A By HOWARD WITT Citing a rather high rate of attrition,. a shortage of availabAe financial aid packages, and the need for a more ex- panded curriculum, the report of the committee appointed to review the LSA. Honors Program will be discussed at today's LSA Executive Committee meeting. Despite these observations, the report gives a' generally favorable evalution of the program, and commit- tee members recommend that the program be continued and strenghtend. FEWER THAN 23 per cent of the students who entered the honors program as freshpersoas in 1974 earned degrees with honors during 1977-78, the report shows. "Arbitrarily, I would have expected that 50 or 75 per cent of the students would have completed the program," noted committee chairman Harold Jacobson. "Someone ought to pay some attention to why so many people dropped out," he continued.. Honors Council Director Dr. Otto Graf, who is retiring at the conclusion of this term, cites financial constraints. and student transfers to other AP Photo programs as reponsible for the ap- suburban parently high attrition figures. e for his Departments which are in need of funds have had to put arlimit on the number of students who will be accep- ted for honors candidacy, Graf noted. ALSO, A NUMBER of students tran- sfer to programs such as nursing and n'J business after two years in the honors program, Graf indicated. Jacobson believes there are also curricular reasons for the attrition rate, and other figures in the report tape has would seem to support him. The num- oice iden- ber of students who are invited to the of Shah honors program and actually cording to matriculate has decreased from 37 per pe was of cent in 1974 to 30 per cent in 1978. nd group Sixty per cent of students who were before he accepted into the honors program but chose to attend other schools said they did so because they preferred the ice said on academic program at the school they the to con- chose. n to total FURTHER, ONLY 17 per cent of current honors students surveyed .portedto thought the variety in the existing his se curriculum was "excellentx" "We concluded that we don't offer nearly as many different courses now as we did some years ago," jacobson said. At one time, he continued, there were many inter-disciplinary literature courses and a science survey course which many honors students elected. Many of these courses were dropped because of reduced finances, Graf noted. "In view of the fact that for the last three years I have asked for ad- ditional clerical help, I am somewhat skeptical that more- money will be for- thcoming to the honors program," Graf commented. "Fortunately, I can type." LACK OF STUDENT financial aid is another major problem which plagues the honors program, both Graf and Jacobson point out. "We lose a substan- tial number of the strongest students to other institutions because of our poor financial aid offers," Graf said. Indeed, the honors report indicates that 37 per cent of those students choosing another school over Michigan would have come here if Michigan had made better financial aid offers. The honors review committee found that the honors program is also suf- fering from affirmative action woes. The University as a whole is presently striving to reach a 10 per cent minority enrollment. The report indicates that of the 1977-78 recipients of degrees with honors, only 39 per cent were women. Committee members guess that about 10 per cent of honors program graduates are Asian-Americans an fewer than 2 per cent are black. JACOBSON SAID, "It puzzles me that there aren't more women," but Graf notes that fewer women are in- terested in fields such as mathematics and hard sciences as honors concen- trations. Graf also said, "I explore strong black student prospects, but in virtually every instance, we lose out in the com- petition to other schools because of the lack of financial aid." The report, which will be discussed at today's LSA Faculty Executive Com- mittee meeting and also at Monday's LSA faculty meeting, concludes, "the Honors Program is an important and strong component of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and we urge the College to accord it the strong support that it merits." Followers encircle Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini near his residence in Neauphle-le-Chateau yesterday, shortly before he prepared to leav flight home to Iran after 14 years of self-imposed exile. Iranl awaits Khomei A 1 a l ! f k a AL - --a- Brandeis University JACOB HIATT EU INSTITUT IN ISRAEL iat does it offer you? * a semester of study in israel in the Fd term . coursework in Eng ish on the politicd, economic and socid development of Israel and in ts Itnguage, history and archaelogy a strong program of Hebrew language study * important internship opporturities in socid service agencies in Jemslem * field trips, study trips, interviews with prornnent Israelis. a kibbutz visit * financid ad is avae Appication deadline: March 15. For futher information, see your Study Abroad cdvisor or write: Office of Intermation rogrmns Brandeis University W atham, Massachusetts 02154 (6T) 647-2422 j-randeis uversdy c karts students of any race. -cir 'XtinC or e hnc orn, sex. ae or nandic to ai Ns progarns and ac'vrtes. TEHRAN, Iran (AP and Reuter) - Tanks and troops paraded in Tehran to assert the government's independence of Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini. But the religious leader left Paris for home as planned early today "to go and serve my country" in pursuit of his dream - an Islamic republic. The military display Wednesday was designed to show that Khomeini's return from nearly 15 years of exile in Iraq and France would not signal surrender by the government of Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar. IT WAS uncertain how Khomeini would be received. His supporters ex- pected millions to greet him when he arrived aboard a chartered Air France Boeing 747 later this morning at Tehran's Mehrabad Airport. He left Paris at 1:17 a.m. for the five- hour and 20-minute flight. He issued a brief statement before departing, thanking the French government and saying, "I leave your country to go and serve my country." IN THE UNITED States, a voice identified as that of the Shah of Iran says in a secretly recorded conver- sation that his advisers should see that civil war is started to ensure the sur- vival of his- reign, a Los Angeles television station said yesterday in a copyright story. The voice on the 15-minute been verified by three top vc tification experts as that Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, acc KNXT. The station said the ta a meeting between the shah a of his advisers "within days"1 left Iran two weeks ago. By stirring up a war, the voi the tape, he hoped to gain tin solidate his forces and retur power. KINXT said the person purl be the shah also condemnedt police for not being brutal enot police force, known by the SAVAK, has been criticized shah forces as having b Iranian citizens. ALSO, A SMALL U.S. plan in Iran Wednesday and firstr dicated five American milita nel were killed and two wers Pentagon sources said. There was no inuediate what caused the crash, whic said occurred while the C-12t twin engine plane was en Tehran from an outlying stati Meanwhile, Iran asked yesterday for talks on possib sion or alteration of defense worth more than two billion d formed sources said last night. They said the request ca Prime Minister Shahpour B 'government, but they could when the talks would take which contracts most likely, affected. ugh. That acronym by anti- rutalized e crashed reports in- ry person- -e injured. word on :h sources turboprop route to .on. Britain le suspen- contracts ollars, in- me from Bakhtiar's 3 not say place or would be SEAFARER REPLACEMENT IMPRACTICAL:' Representative blasts. WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rep. Robert proposed for Michigan's Davis (Rt-Mich.) said yesterday the sula Navy's proposed "ELF" low-frequency Davis said he talked y communications to reach Navy sub- defense officials and1 marines has so many practical and more about thesystem. political flaws it would do little good. "This system is only "I would be surprised if in fact we peacetime," he said. "I ever see the completion of the ELF destroyed . .. Anybodyc system in Michigan's Upper Penin- with a shovel and dig it u sula," Davis told reporters at a news THE ORIGINAL prop conference. network measuring 2,400 THE SYSTEM, called extremely low but now the Defense I frequency, would involve a network of talking about only 130 communications lines dug into the Davis said. groudn, to send messages to sub- Davis contended the s marines in deep oceans. First proposed work for submarines as "Sanguine," then modified as merged, will harm the "Seafarer," the system has had and possibly the healtho troubles getting acceptance to various nearby, would be a was parts of the country. wartime, and is oppose The latest plan, called "ELF." is stituents. ELF Upper Penin- yesterday with learned much designed for It can be easily can go up there p." posal was for a 0 square miles, Department is square miles, system will not deeply sub- e environment of people living te of money in ed by his con- The best with the latest U.M. Stylists at the UNION Open till 5;:15 p. m. Student group concerned with suicide {Co itied from Page 1 ting them to available agencies." "The problem is getting people who don't know what to do about their problem to find help," said Davol. TO FURTHER bring the problem out into the open. SCS wants to obtain bet- ter University documentation of suicides, according to Linn. Also emphasizing the need for more effective documentation, Korn said there is a lack of communication among the various agencies that come into contact with information per- taining to the number of suicides and the counseling agencies. "We need a recommendation from the president's office that says it is a significant problem, and we need to collect hard data so we can study it more effectively," said Korn. However, University Safety Depar- tment Director Walter Stevens said the Safety Department is in close contact with the Ann Arbor Police.. "They (the police) give us infor- mation if it pertains to the University, and if students are involved," said Stevens. He said there were two suicides on campus in 1978 and one of these was not a student. "IT'S DOUBTFUL there were at- tempts (of suicide) that we didn't know about, and suicides that weren't documented because there was no proof they were intentional," said Stevens, "but I am unaware of any massive cover-up." According to the Washtenaw County Medical Examiner, there were 53 suicides last year. However, the num- ber of student suicides was not available. Linn said another major goal of SCS is to bring about an attitude shift on the part of the administration and students "from one of passive recognition to pro- active responsibility." "WE WANT to put pressure on the administration to coordinate the overlapping services, and this may in- volve reallocation of resources," he ex- plained. Callahan said changes may soon be taking place to deal with the problem. "Other universities pay more explicit attention to it, and the needs exist here also," said Callahan. He added that a University committee is already looking into the problem and in the future more resources may be allocated to such services as education programming. He said SCS could function to "keep the people who have the resources oi this." I Where can you get a six pack that costs as little as at a day, and will last a whole week? i$ I .S -I ' 11*IIa