rOge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 8, 1974 Page Two THE MICHiGAN UAILY Hospital reform (Continued from Page 1){ to implement the planning and financing of new facilities, partic-i ularly a new main hospital. The present administrative struc-1 ture of the med center includes a director, a board in control, and an administrative staff. This body{ "primarily focused on problems' relating to patient care and the1 interface among the Hospital, med school, and nursing school." THE REVIEW committee's pro-] posals would abolish this present1 system and would create the po- sition of Vice-President for Health Affairs who would be assisted by a council and the centralization of the nursing, pharmacy, dentistry, public health and medical schools into the new school of Allied Health Professions. T h e committee recommended{ that the vice-president be charged with long-term program and capi- tal planning, development of ap- propriate interdisciplinary and in- terprofessional health education AP Photo programs and representing the University in health matters to light sav- external constituencies." One member of the review com- mittee, however, wrote a dissent- ing report. ROBERT DOERR, Associate Dean of the Dental School believes that "there is no evidence that the establishment of a vice-president for health affairs is the best solu- tion" to med center problems. urged "I share their concern," con- tinued Doerr. "Experience in many other uniersities demon- strates that medicine, in fact, does dominate to the detriment of the other he-lth schools - why run that risk when the systems at this University has been basically successful?" '1 1 Although Doerr agrees with most DOERR ALSO believed that the of the committees observations, he centralization of the health sci- believes that a vice-president for ences would lead to their isolation health affairs "would detract from from the rest of the University. the autonomy and could conceiv- This concern was also voiced by ably lead to a weakening of the Nursing School Dean Carolyn smaller h e a l t h professional Davis. schools." "I'm highly skeptical of the Doerr pointed out that four of committee's proposals because the five deans of the health! they could cause the health sci- schools were opposed to the com- ences to become isolated," she ex- mittees proposals. plained. DEAN JOHN GRONVALL of "I believe the creation of a new the medical school, who is also the vice-presidency would promote un- present director of the med cen- healthy division and competition ter, was the only dean not opposed within the University. Modifica- to the recommendations. tions of the present structure can Doerr stated that the main con- solve some of the problems and cern of the other deans was that preserve the strength of the indi- medical - hospital problems would vidual health science schools," Do- dominate the situation. err concluded. Pre-dawn busing School children in Peoria. Ill., await their school bus in the early morning darkness yesterday as one result of nationwide day ings time, a measure hoped to conserve energy. OPEN HOUSE at HILLEL We all have been busy doing our own thing, drink- ing, sleeping, skiing, surfing, touring Israel. JOIN US TONIGHT FOR SOME GOOD TALK AND EATS WITH PEOPLE WHO HAVE RETURNED FROM ISRAEL. 8:00 P.M.-1429 HILL ST. *-- - FACTS ON ABORTION YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT: ! Abortions are legal in Michigan and easily available for early pregnancies " Early abortions need not cost more than $150, for total care r Some clinics are better than others t U of M counseling and medical staff have approved KEEMER CLINIC.............1-961-9779' SUMMIT MEDICAL CENTER ... 1-272-8450 WOMEN'S HEALTH SERVICE .. 1-272-2100 * All the above clinics perform free pregnancy testing and pro- vide counseling services r Late abortions (over 12 weeks from the last menstrual period) must be performed in a hospital For more information or pregnancy counseling, call the above clinics or: EAST CLINIC, Health Service Afternoons 3-5, Mon.-Frl. 207 Fletcher 763-1210 STUDENT SERVICES, Counseling Services 9-5, Mon.-Fri. 3rd Floor, Mich. Union 764-8437 ETHICS AND RELIGION 9-5, Mon.-Fri. 3rd Floor, Mich. Union 764-7442 MENTAL HEALTH CLINIC 8-5, Mon.-Fri. 2nd Floor, Health Service 764-8313 WOMEN'S CRISIS CENTER 2 p.m.-1 a.m. 306 N. Division (St. Andrews Church) 761-WISE DAILY OFFICIAL BU L LETIN Tuesday, January 8 to new faculty & faculty who needi ' standards defended DAY CALENDAR Ctr. for Continuing Educ. of Women: Lunchtime conversations, W omen's Studies, Conf. Rms. 4, 5, League, noon. Engineering: Bi-weekly meeting of College Standing Comm., Dean's Office, 3 pm. Modern Dance Class: Trotter House, 7 pm. Music School: J. Dawson, saxaphone 'doctoral, SM Recital Hall, 8 pm. Residential College Astronomical 5Film Festival: "The Violent Universe," E. Quad Aud., 9 pm. GENERAL NOTICES During Winter Aerm Mich. Memorial- Phoenix Proj. will make grants to sup- port research in peaceful uses of nu- clear energy; requests for $3,000 or less considered appropriate; priority given help opening new area of research; re- turn applications for grants to Phoe- nix Pro. by Feb. 1; obtain applics. at PML, N. Campus or call 764-6213, SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Interviews: Register by phone or in person. Lakeside Farm Camp, MI, Coed., will interview Jan. 15, 10 to 5. Openings: specialists in waterfront, rid-' ing, handcrafts, nature, gen. coun- selors. Camp Wise, Social Work Camp, OH., will interview Jan. 15, 9 to 5. Openings: gen. counselors, specialists in all fields, unit supervisors. Camp Sea Gull. MI. Coed, will inter- view Jan. 16, 9 to 5. Openings: water- front, cabin counselors, specialists in arts, crafts, riding, archery, tennis, 1gymnastics. 4Camp Tamarack MI Coed, will inter- view Jan. 18, 9 to 5 & Jan. 25, 9 to 5. Openings: gen. counselors, specialists in every field, admin. openings, service (Continued from Page 1) sions office is taking a more per- that general gradepoints were go- -A rise in the cost of attending sonal course with applicants, send- ing up, and that students who the University for out of state stu- ing follow-up letters and encour- might have flirted with probation dents to the point where it is no aging more campus visits. He also in the past were now able to get a longer competitive with other elite said that communication with couple of good grades and lift institutions, cutting the number of state high schools was being their gradepoints to the point where "superior out of state students" stepped up, so that high school they could evade trouble, while attending the University, counselors would have a better those with chronic problems were -A general decline in SAT scores idea of what a student needed for staying where they were. In other nationally in the last ten years. The admission. words, some marginal students average c o m b i n e d score has The University is also participat- were pulling away from the 2.0 dronped from 980 to 925 during ing in regional college fairs where area while others remained there. that period, and prospective applicants can come The ones who are pulling away -A decline in the number of and talk with representatives of are the ones who would have been applicants due to the end of the the University. The University re- reinstated in the past. Now, fewer postwar baby boom, and the fact cently took part in one held in of those asked not to return were that fewer students desire to go Chicago, and plans are underway returning, and those who accounted to college. for attending Philadelphia and for the higher reinstatement rate The general economic and social Boston fairs. were no longer subject to academic trends which have decreased the Associate Dean Charles Morris' disciplinary action. relitive imnortance of a liberal report examined the number and Morris also disclosed that the arts education in the last few nature of academic actions taken number of students who petition years. in the last twelve years by the the Academic Action board has Community colleges have grown University. risen dramatically in 'the last sev- to the point where Sjorgren said Statistics over a twelve year' eral years, and that more students that one half of all students start- period showed that fewer students were making use of incompletes ing college in Michigan were start- were being placed on probation, than in the past. He said that this ing at community colleges, par- and fewer were being asked not to accounted for the higher volume ticularly in the northern part of continue than in the past. At the of traffic that that office dealt the state. same time, of those asked not to with. Sjorgren said that his office was continue, fewer were being rein- taking steus to deal with the small- stated. er pool of applicants. The admis- Morris explained this by saying COuncii gives initial of assault t t t i t ORTH'OGONALITY 340 Maynard St. GIGANTIC SALE on almost everything COME IN AND SEE. I staafff.. I- I1 PROJ ECT OUTREACH Psychology 201-2 credit hours What? MASS MEETING When? TONIGHT, Jan. 8 Time? 7:30 P.M. Where? HILL AUDITORIUM PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM Presents VIVIAN BLAINE in S.r - I a new comedy by GEORGE FURTH Saturday and Sunday JANUARY 12-13 3:00 and 8:00 POWER CENTER Advance Sales: Mendelssohn Lobbby 764-0450 Power Center box office open January 12-13 at 1:00 P.M. 763-3333 approval 1 reform ora (Continued from Page 1) } cluding removal from candidacy,j or office if the election has already' taken place, being ineligible forl any city-wide office for the next five years, and a $100 fine. Although the idea of an election control ordinance was generally well received by the council mem- bers, approval for the ordinance came not without some previous MEDITATION arica and tibetan methods Psychologist studying effects of meditation offers training in return for participaoon in researchl. SEEKING NEXPERIENCED AND EXPERIENCED WOMEN CAiL Tom Greenfild: 764-8437 Leave name and number o election (Continued from Page 1) 0 was Gill himself, who was per- in a n C L intto read his account of the SGC Administrative Vice Presi- politicking by the sharply divided dent David Fowler and former Ex- council. ecutive Vice President Sandy Green supported Gill's contention CAROL JONES (D-Second Ward) that Schaper, who is no longer a cited what was commonly agreed student at the University, was sim- by Democrats and Human Rights ply "walked down the hall" and Party council members to be a expelled from SGC's chambers aft- serious omission in the ordinance. er admittely leaving an SGC mim- It did not contain any upper limit eograph machine in messy condi- on the total amount that can be tion. spent in an election campaign. The SGC president, who has been DeGrieck explained the reason- a frequent target of charges rang- ing behind the objection. He main-j ing from election fraud to em- tained that the amount spent on bezzlement in recent months, was publicity for an election campaign still glowing with jubilation last can seriously effect the outcome night over his successful day in of the election, and that, "the only court. way to prevent an election from "I WAS BRILLIANT," laughed being bought and keep it fair is Gill. "I made the prosecutor look to have an upper limit on spending. like a fool. What it all boiled down Any election control . law that to was the definition of assault and doesn't have such a provisi n is a battery, and what happened be- sham." tween Schaper and me plainly doesn't fit that definition. That's F+, why the jury came out so fast." 1+!Gill said his own attorney, Ger- ald Smith of New York, could not appear last week due to a case of laryngitis and advised Gill to HOUSE OF IMPORTS handle his own defense. SHEEPSKIN COATS Gill, who once spent eight months '/3 FF n te LAGES ofa two-year sentence in jail for SOFF on the LARGEST driving a stolen vehi"t° across in- SELECTION of the warm- terstate lines, has since been fully est coants in Ann Arbor! paroled. A conviction on the as- M XI: sault charge would have brought MAX.:him a maximum penalty of 90 Reg. $185 ; days in jail or a $100 fine. NOW $115 SCHAPER, whom Gill fired *w$from his Council duties last May, Swaked swiftly from the courtroom % CAfollowing Thursday's trial and has Re . $149 95 since been unavailable for com- Rg $ment. NOW $95 Thompson also would not com- ment on Gill's acquittal. JACKFTL charges "Experimental learning" in institutional settings 28 Adult Activity Center Child Care Action Center Corntree Cooperative Daycare Center Drop-In Center for Retarded Adults Inkster Frazier Elementary School King School Tutorial Maxey Boys Training School Mott-University Childrens Hospital '4.. T-Groups Washtenaw County Juvenile Court Wayne County Clinic for Child Study Wayne County Child Development Center Yorkwoods Ypsilanti State Hospital Political Perspectives on Prisons Community Center Proiect Community Arts Workshop Senior Citizens Project Educational Management Center Peace Neighborhood Center /'1'i _.... ... rs2w- w.:et. Reg. $124.95 NOW $85 SAVE $$$ KEEP WARM! Open 6 Days a Week 769-8555 320 E. LIBERTY, ANN ARBOR HOPE YOU HAD A NICE HOLIDAY UM BARBERS and STYLISTS MICHIGAN UNION Northville State Hospital Plymouth Center for Human Development Pro Fect Transition a . .- . .. -L The Paulists are trying to meet the challenge of today's world in city streets and suburban homes nn the campursn in their own way to achieve their mission: to help Christ communicate the ideas from His mind to the minds of all men For more information about the Paulists, America's first religious community, send for the PAULIST MINI-COURSE 310 CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN ETHICS Crisis within traditional Christian ethics: historical background; the relationship of faith and ethics; place of the Bible and tra- dition. Contemporary debate: consequence versus norm; impor- I I 1' I