Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY t-riday, January 1 ,1, 19 /:5 ,'r THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1-riday, January 12, lV/5 Dems approve major reorganization plan By DAVID STOLL 1 After gaining control of t h e Washtenaw County Board of Com- missioners for the first time since the Civil War, the Democratic ma- jority has already begun a sweep-t ing reorganization of county gov- ernment. A new plan approved last week replaces a Republican reorganiza- tion plan that was adopted by the body last December. While both plans involve significant changes in governmental structure, t h e r e are a number of differences be- tween the two. Democrats say the Republican plan was an attempt to thwartt their new majority on the Board and make good on their promise to quickly replace it with another. Abolished under the Democratic plan is the post of county admin- istrator, and with it goes R o s s Childs, long-time chief executive of Washtenaw County. Childs h a d come under heavy criticism from Democrats in recent years. Also abolished is the Board of Auditors. The aim of the new plan, which was approved last week and went into effect immediately, is "to get the bureaucracy under control," says commissioner James Cregar (D-Ypsilanti). Most observers agree that the rapid increase in county functions during r e c e n t years has outgrown the old admin- istrative structure. The county administrator, Cre- gar says, not only had a "mind- boggling" job keeping tabs on all the departments, but also had a ments, making them 'more respon-' monopoly on the information which sive to the wishes of the com- the Board of Commissioners need- missioners. ed to make decisions. The Republican plan also would t The three part-time members of have abolished the county admin- the Board of Auditors, he contin- istrator's post, but would have re-c ues, were incapable of properly quired that departments be direct-c auditing the county's $12.5 million ly accountable to the Board oft operation. Auditors and its executive secre-l The Democratic plan creates tary.t four new positions. A full-time con- The commissioners would have troller will perform the functions received communications f r o m of the old Board of Auditors as the departments and carried o u t well as those of the budget officer, their decisions through the audi- another post which has been abol- tors. The three auditors had been ished. appointed for staggered four year An executive assistant to the terms. Although one was a Demo-, commissioners will, in Commis- I crat, all three were appointed by sioner Kathy Fojtik's (D-Ann Ar- Republican-dominated Boards of bor) words, be a "chief paper-pas- Commissioners. ser" between the departments and Fojtik thinks this "single line the commissioners. of communication" from t h e A corporation counsel will per- departments to the commissioners form legal services for the corn- I might have been "blocked and missioners now provided by t h e rendered the commissioners inef- fective." county prosecutor, William Delhey. epublicans, on the other hand, And for the first time, the county contend that their now-defunct re- will hire a personnel director. onzat their euby re Cregar contrasts the "pyramidal" organization was required by state structure of the old county gov- law and insist that it was apoliti- ernment, and the Republican reor- cal in nature. They have their own ganization, with what he calls the jcriticisms of the new plan. gwheel-tikne thsha" fthe news Commissioner Paul Hansen (R- structure. Augusta township) calls the reor- "Under the new plan the Board, will be at the center of county THURS. JANWLAR"Yi 1 government rather than detached and above it," says Fojtik. Shev thinks the new plan will multiply the channels of communication be- tween the Board and the depart- ganization "o b v i o u s l y directed against Republican office holders." "Cuts were made in the staffs of the prosecuting attorney, the re- gister of deeds, and the c o u n t y clerk, all of whom are Republi- cans," Hansen argues. He does think the plan has "some g o o d points," however, one of which is the replacement of the auditors with a controller. Hove a flair for artistic writing? Ifyu arenest poetry, and music. or writing feature artis:Contacet Art Ed itoar, c/o The dradance, fym,' WINTER COATS! From Iran, a large selection of hand-made sheepskin jackets, car-coats, maxis and children's sizes. Ideal for your skiing outing All Coats 20% OFF! Also a fine selection of hand- pointed i e w e I r y, tapestries, pipes, fabrics and a hundred other quality items. BACK TO COLLEGE SPECIAL HAND-MADE SILVER/TURQUOISE RINGS 1/2 OFF! Reg. 9.95 /* NOW 4.49 HOUSE OF IMPORTS Mon., Fri., Sot., 9-9 Tues.-Thurs., Sun., 9-6 769-8555 320 E. Liberty T( CREATIVE REFORM SHA BBAT SERVICE Cricle- Creative Poetry-Torah Study UA .1,4P n k i a I W ne and Chiah1 8 p.m. FRIDAYS HILLEL LIBRARY 1429 Hill Street .. or ,,,,, " ":{iga a m o a tiv""A8"rnS"S+a}:aa it:"::%{F sii:::: : ssi::}i;}" : i:;si~i { i .........,...":r S DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN :.... .......... FRIDAY, JANUARY 12 DAY CALENDAR Industrial & Operations Engineering Lecture: D. Teichroew, "Revisions of PSL/PSA," 244 W. Engin. Bldg., 12 noon. Writing Prized To Be Awarded: Hop- wood Prizes for Underclassmen, Bain- Swiggett Award, Michael R. Gutterman Award, Acad. of American Poets Award; Richard Wilbur, distinguished American poet, will read his poetry after the awards, Rackham Amph., 4 pmn. Humanities & New Science Group: K. Cagn, "The Nature & Implication of Federal Research Programs: Assump- tions & Myths," 1040 Nat. Res., 4:15 pm. Swimming: Michigan vs. Wisconsin, Matt Mann Pool, 7:30 pm. Hockey: Michigan vs. Denver, Coli- seum, 8 pm. International Folk Dance: Barbour Gym, 8 pm. Music School: Daniel Blumenthal, piano Honors lecture, "The Hexameron and its Collaborators," SM Recital Hall, 8 pm. Musical Society: Mozart's "Cosi Fan Tutte, Canadian Opera Co., Power, 8 pm. GENERAL NOTICES Attention Students: Jan. 23, 5 pm, is last date for Winter Term when the Registrar's Office will: a. Accept the Student 100 per cent Withdrawal No- tice for refund purposes. (Excluding a $50.00 disenrolment fee); b. Allow re- fund for the student who reduces hours of course credit. February 20 is the last date for Winter Term ,when Registrar's Office will allow refund for a 50 per cent Withdrawal. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB INTERN TEACHING PROGRAM (an alternative approach to teaching): For liberal arts graduates at' Temple Uni- versity for secondary teaching; earn up to $16,000 in 2 yrs. while getting a Master's degree. FELLOWSHIP AWARD: Full tuition for MBA at U. of Cincinnati along with salaried position at Burke Mar- keting Research, alternating work & study terms. UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME: Seeking MA's & PhD's in development econ., bus. ad., pub. admin. Fluency in Spanish or Frenich. UNITED NATIONS FUND FOR POPU- LATION ACTIVITIES seeking MA's & PhD's in population. Fluency in Span- ish or French. Applications available in CAREER PLANNING & PLACE- MENT. GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe Beginning Our Popular Friday Night International Dinners JAN. 12, 6 P.M. an AMERICAN INDIAN DINNER BENEFIT DINNER FOR "NATIVE AMERICAN CHILD ADOPTIVE COUNCIL" Reservation, ph. 662-5189 or 663-2362 Minimum $1.15 STUDY IN ENGLAND, FALL, 1973 Students may now fill out applications for remain- ing places for study at the University of Sheffield or the University of Keele, Fall term, 1973. Applicants who are enrolled in Education or intend to be in the teacher certificate program are eligible. You must be a first or second semester junior or first semester senior in the term you plan on going. APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY JANUARY 12, 1972 Additional information: 764-5496, room 4115 School of Education FREE 1INSTR~U~CTtoN UNION 17-9 PM fI r7. I' I THIS WEEKEND! MOZART'S "COST FAN TUTTE" by the CANADIAN OPERA COMPANY POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS TONIGHT AT 8:00, TOMORROW AT 3:00 AND 8:00 Box-office open Ia hours before performance jJIVE SITY cfUSICAL c8OCIETY c. Burton Memorial Tower Phone 665-3717 L' !j __ ___ _ _ _ . _ _. i Give The Bear a break. You're the only one who can. Because all Smokey can do is ask you to help prevent forest fires. He can't break your matches. Or douse your campfires. Or snuff out your cigarets. Only you can. S9, please, lend Smokey a hand. And maybe while you're at it, lend him your voice too: tell people to give the bear a break. He deserves it. So does America. Ad I ' =< I