P~a,. 2-Thursday, April 12, 1979-The Michigan Daily .rsent.elves of UNITED TELEPHONE COMPANY of Ohio will be recruiting in Ann Arbor on Thursday, AprIl 1,. We are interested in interviewing present college graduates or June graduates with the follow- ing degrees: 1. Bachelors or Masters Degree in Electrical Engineering. 2. Bachelors or Masters Degree in Business Admin- istration or Industrial Engineering. 3. Masters Degree in Business Administration with a strong background in finance, Statistics, Market- ing or Accounting and a Bachelors Degree in. Accounting. Cell the Personnel Office collect at (513) 498-5174 or (513) 496-5118 prior to Monday, April 16 to schedule an inter- V"w. 'U' pushes hospital at state level By JOHN GOYER University officials yesterday suggested to Governor William Milliken that "a liason would probably be necessary" between two executive branch agencies, in order to negotiate state level planning for the University Hospital replacement project, accor- ding to Interim University President Allan Smith. Smith said yesterday the proposed Good Luck on Fins from the professionals at DASCOLA STYLISTS Arborland.........971 -9975 Maple Village.......761 -2733 Liberty off State ...... 668-9329 East U. at So. U...... 662-0354 liason between the state Department of Management and Budget (DMB) and the Michigan Department of Public Health (MDPH) would bring together both sides of the health planning process. THE DMB recommends to the state legislature the amount of funding that the hospital will need. The MDPH decides whether there is sufficient need for a new hospital. A spokeswoman for the governor's of- fice said Milliken was reviewing the hospital plans, but would not yet com- ment on any specific efforts at the state level to support the plans. "It may be something that the governor shouldn't be involved with," she said. The need for a new $254 million University Hospital has been questioned by the regional planning agency, the Comprehensive Health Planning Agency of Southeastern Michigan (CHPC-SEM). The council voted Tuesday to advise that the MDPH. turn down the University's application for a certificate of need. THE CHPC-SEM also voted to advise disapproval at the state level because council members objected to the size and cost of the replacement project, although they agreed the University needs a new hospital. rather a question of disagreeing with the criticism. THE CHPC-SEM has only the authority to make a negative recom- mendation to the MDPH. The DMB told the University last fall it will support the hospital replacement project up to $200 million, which would needs:v;A a4ethsitl 'Te longer we >od' s aware of cost.' delai, erery- the increased -Congressman Carl Purse lt n Im .:;.......v:...... .r... {... .":M.M'.:.v .... .M M...n Y ouCaAvoid Leaving town for the summer? Ask your Ann Arbor Bank and Trust teller to place your S.tuet s checking account on no activity status. Studet i ng un vyssNo activity means no service charges while you are on vacation. NaIn the fall your account will be reactivated automatically. N eEnjoy your vadation. * 4~ ~ 4 A CHPC-SEM member, Mel Ravitz, charged at the council's Tuesday meeting that the University apparently was going "to move on the political tract in Lansing" because Univesity of- ficials refused to delay the certificate of need application. CHPC-SEM members had asked the University at the meeting ' to delay the planning process, and con- sider scaling down the plan in light of CHPC-SEM criticisms. The University replied that the CH- PC-SEM staff criticisms do not apply to the University Hospital plans. it claimed the plans merit special con- sideration because of the educational- research role of the hospital. After the Tuesday meeting Smith said the University was not circumven- ting the regional planning agency in taking the plan unaltered to the MDPH. Smith said Tuesday that it was not a question of avoiding criticism, but Ann Arbor Bank and Trust Company __ I ,t 1979-1980 COMPUTER SCIENCE/EE GRADUATES Wichita Introduces the stress-relleving expense-paid weekend. Friday and Saturday Apil27 and 28. be raised through a state bond issue. Smith has said that the University is caught in a "chicken or the egg" situation. Without assurances of fun- ding, Smith said the University cannot realistically apply for a certificte of need for a project of this size. Yet the University cannot seek commitments from legislators on funding without having already obtained a certificate of need. SINCE THE DMB considers the economic impact of building projects and the MDPH considers whether a project satisfies health care needs, Smith said it is likely that sooner or later there would be mutual discussion between the two departments. The DMB makes funding recommen- dations to the state legislature while the recommendation of the MDPH would come in the form of a certificate of need. The legislature, however, cannot approve funding for the project without a certificate of need. Also yesterday, Representative Carl Pursell (D-Ann Arbor) met with University Hospital Director Jeptha Dalston. "I WOULD consider today asking (MDPH director) Dr. Maurice Reizen to overturn the (CHPC=SEM's) decision. The longer we delay, everybody's aware of the increased cost," Pursell said afterwards. Pursell supported the University's contention that the CHPC-SEM should give the University special con- sideration, saying .he considers the hospital unique because of its educational-research role. He said he had not yet reviewed the CHPC-SEM staff report criticizing the hospital plans. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS.344-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 154 Thursday, April 12, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,2Michigan 48109. Subscription rates:-$12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); ;13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer ses- sion published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. s Mark Alft Helen McMahon Ron Engelbrecht Dwight Ensminger Ernest McNair Worried about where you'll be 5-10 years from now? We'll tell you about ground floor opportunities in VLSI technology, or areas like Resource Partitioned Architec- ture. * Worried about too-narrow specializa- tion? We'll tell you how we make "Total Systems" involvement a day-to-day reality, and about our flexible methodology and informal hardware/software taskforce ap- proach to problem-solving. m Worried about high-stress living? We'll give you a look at a lifestyle that's afford- able, unhurried, uncrowded, smog-free. 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