,. , LSA to cut enrollment by 500 The Michigan Doily-Tuesday, November 8, 1977-Page 9 iU EARN EXTRA CASH CASH PAID FOR YOUR BLOOD PLASMA NOW This is your opportunity to help supply this need for blood plasma EXTRA CASH BONUSES-Prizes given weekly $ (Continuedfrom Page 1) combat these trends?" Frye.asked. "It becomes a question of size versus quality, and it is my conclusion that quality has to be the controlling fac- tor." THE DECLINE in enrollment must be accepted, Frye told. the faculty; recruitment of quality students must be stepped up at the same time. The dean said he also plans to increase the pro- portion of outstate students in LSA to create new tuition income, which will allow the college to hire new junior faculty members. He announced plans to .reduce the number of sophomore transfer students by about 50 this win- ter and next fall. The LSA faculty also heard from University Vice-President for Acadepm-promising anvthing." vlil t trl Vif. R 1\r6. 1 U\7.luLii4 lva [1 ..GiuGi11 (./1 V11110111S ally 411111fj. , ic Affairs Harold Shapiro, who outlined plans for enhancing the educational ex- SHAPIRO reiterate perience of underclass students and recent pronouncemen d the University's nts about improv- .w. . ..x...,nvamr..aasYUxsmvactaw._4xax+. :xa: aax":AwYvm aGLYit4]au:.:o:.wx5:savn .1. .tns5v Should ;we go lower in the pool to combat these trendsIt becomes a question of size versus quality, and it is my conclusion that quality has to be the .controlling factor.' -LSA Dean Bill Fr e . "'. + .%\ e " .? " ::;: " .i '.e ": v .k.,"?: ? gave anoptimistic budget forecast for the coming year. "An increase in budget looks promising," said Shapiro. "But I'm not ing the lot of freshpeople and sopho- mores, and suggested freshperson seminars as a possible solution. "There should also be more interac- tion of students with their instructors on a personal basis," Shapiro said. "We must pay attention to the freshman and sophomore experience to indirectly help enrollment all the while." The vice-president also presented his plans for establishing a ''flexiblefund,' derived from taxing the University budgets to be reallocated "for new pro- grams or for anything we think is im- portant." No final decisions have been made on the plan yet, Shapiro said, since the proposal must still go through the University's budget priorities commit- tee and budget administrators. "It will be studied carefully for the first time very soon," he said. The Charles Barid Carillon at the University, the third heaviest carillon in the world, marked its 40th anniver- sary in December 1976. The University established the nation's first department of intramural sports in 1912. IL ----------- I T-- $2 Bring in this coupon and collect an extra 2.00 on your first donation $2 Weekly: Records, top ten chart Thanksgiving spirit: Five-ten pound turkeys Kroger $15 gift certificate Month end: two AM-FM radios " Free meical examination * Physician supervised program DONO " You can donate twice weekly Mon: without ill effects Tues: " Must be at least 18 Wed: COME IN OR CALL US AT: Thu: BLOOD PLASMA DONOR CENTER Fri: 309 PEARL STREET " YPSILANTI, MICH. Sat: 8 TELEPHONE 487-3100 We need additional blood plasma donors now OR HOURS: 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Closed : 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m.-4.00 p.m. 8:30am.-1:00 pm. i I Pftwft Browne hi (Continued from Page 1) paign manager Dennis Archer said yesterday that the Young organiza- tion isn't resting on the mayor's 55 per cent showing in the September primary. "We are energized," Archer said. "We are conducting this campaign like we had gotten 20 per cent coming out of the primary." He predicted a Young victory "between 60 and 67 per cent." Browne. campaign manager Ulys- ses Hammond gives his candidate at least a 53 per cent victory margin, but cautions that "turnout is the key." 3I 'oks to topp considering running for the U.S. Senate., The Council race also includes a contest for Levin's Council presiden- cy. The top vote-getter automatically, becomes president, the second most powerful post in Detroit city govern- ment. COMPETING for the vacant seats are candidates who range from a Marxist attorney to an agent with the United States Treasury, to a former Wayne State University basketball star. k The September primary narrowed the field of candidates from 80 to 18. All the incumbents finished in the top nine, along with radical black attor- ney Kenneth Cockrel, the Marxist lawyer who successfully defended Madeline Fletcher, a Flint police offi- cer accused of shooting her partner. Cockrel finished seventh in the primary, ahead of one incumbent, former Detroit Tiger shortstop Billy Rogell, who traditionally doesn't campaign. Cockrel is considered a le Young front-runner despite being shunned by both major newspapers and by the influential UAW. ALSO finishing in the top nine was Anthony Wierzbicki, a former coun- cilman who gave up his seat for: a stint as a city accountant. If the election follows the primary pattern, Councilwoman Erma Hen- derson will follow Levin to the presidency as the top vote-getter, giving Detroit for the first time a black at the head of both the executive and the legislative branch- es. Also in the running for the presidency is Councilman Nicholas Hood, the president pro-tem and second place vote-getter to Hender- son. Retiring President- Levin, how- ever, won the presidency in 1973 after coming in third in the primary. If that tradition holds, the top spot will go to Councilwoman Maryann Ma- haffey, a white liberal. Join the Daily's Arts Department Phone 764-0552 BUT SINCE many Detroiters con- sider the mayoral race already de- cided, the contest for Detroit City C uncil has taken on added signifi- cance. Seven incumbents are seeking re-election to the nine-member coun- cil, and - since incumbents lose infrequently - thb real race is for the seats left vacant by Browne and Council President Carl Levin, who is 0 The DAILY'S PHONE NUMBERS: Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News & Happenings 764-0552 Sports 764-0562 v Liquid protein can be hazardous, even deadly (Continued from Page 1) tinues to stock the liquid protein product, however, and to sell it without a prescription. "It doesn't provide roughage for the bowels, and the directions don't explic- itly state the need for water," said Mar- tin Citz at Food and Drug Mart. But Food and Drug still carried the diet substance. Mickey Mendell of Mendell's Phar- macy warned against using the diet without a prescription - yet Mendell's has not withdrawn its stock of the pro- duct from its shelves. CATHI TRIBUNE, a home economist for Detroit Weight Watchers, says her organization views the diet with suspicion. "Almost all our members have tried fast-dieting methods without success," she said. "With the fast way, you don't learn anything except how to starve yourself." One person who has tried the liquid protein diet under a doctor's super- vision disagreed. "I had tried other diets to limit what I ate, but none worked," said Joe Dorey of South Lyon. "I found it easier to just not eat." Dorey's'doctor, however, insisted on checkups with complete blood tests every two weeks. He also made Dorey go off the diet for three days after being on it for two weeks. 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