Foxe TWo THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 15, 1076 1 _aeTwHEMCIGDALhusay p.l1. ,17 Back by Popular Demand MAY 2, 1976 at 7:30 p.m. I THE RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF When You WANT to See Double-See US... 2 IBM Copier II Machines!! & SERVICE WHILE YOU WAIT Conveniently Located in the Mich. Union the an alb.r 0 dm"cooperat e TONIGHT THURSDAY, APR. 15 DAY FOR NIGHT (Francois Truffaut, 1973) AUD. A-7 & 9 Truffaut's love poem to the cinema and the movie he was born to make. The warmth, humor and elusiveness of film (and life) is explored as a director (played by Truf- faut) sets out to make a film, MEET PAMELA, amid end- less hilarious complications. Academy Award for Best For- eign Film. Jacqueline Bisset, Jean-Pierre Leaud, Jean- Pierre Aumont, Valentina Cortese. French with subtitles. in AUD. A, ANGELL HALL $1.25 Friday: MILESTONES and THE KING OF HEARTS Daily Classifieds Get Results >)<=x) <=>omo)<>.ot) 04=00< 0= f0 THE COLLABORATIVE tQ SPRING ART CLASSES UAC-Artists and Craftsmen Guild JEWELRY: Lee Curtin. Thursday: 7-9 p.m. L EADED GLASS: Irene Dabonian. Monday: 3-5 p.m. MACRAME: Sandy Mayer. Wednesday: 7-9 p.m. SCULPTURE: Ralph Wolfe. Monday: 7-9 p.m. WEAVING: Carol Furtado. Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. PHOTOGRAPHY: Mark Reesman. Tuesday: V 3-5 p.m. r ^ Call 668-7884 or stop in 2nd floor Michigan ., Union. Classes begin May 10th and run for seven weekst At the MASONIC AUDITORIUM Inteflex not meeting student needs, goals (Continued from Page 1) teaching Inteflex courses and a bio-medicine concentrator wonder whether the benefits like most program members, are worth the extra load. Some Dorne says there is barely! also believe that at high school enough room in his schedule to age ,students are too young to satisfy the requirements, let make a career decision," he alone take a wide range of explained. courses. A N O T H E R PROBLEM THE DEFENDERS of Inte- area is admissions standards, flex, however, are proud to where some faculty members point out what they believe to assert that the most qualified be successful features of the students are not always select- program A comprehensive ed. Dr. Elliot Juni, a professor evaluation process has -report- of microbiology who has taught edly helped to improve the and devised curriculum for In- coursework, and the number of teflex, says that students who black and women students in can reason well are not differ- the program has approached entiated from those who are national standards in some merely good memorizers. areas. Out of a class size of "Some students are good fifty, 24are women and five memorizers," Juni said, "but are blacks.I once in medical' school, you Another successful element have to be able to reason." of the program is the precep- Also, students are too often torship. This gives the student selected for their "pleasing four weeks of first-hand work personalities," according to with a doctor, and a chance to Juni, who says it is difficult to take a close look at the rigors know whether aperson is truly of a medical career. The stu- compassionate. H dent is then in a better position N E V E R T H E L ES S 5, to make an intelligent decision many agree that the admissions about medicine.. committee has not always used If a student decides he or she the same standards. Former wants to leave the program, it Inteflex student Bill Braund is more than likely the result of theorizes that the administra- academic pressure. Already, tion discovered the program's among the first group of Inte- first class had a great divers- flex students, 19 have dropped ity of interests, and attributed out, taken time off, or are tak- its high attrition rate to this ing classes over again. fact. Thus the following classes THE YOUNGER classes have were picked primarily for their lost fewer students so far, but devotion to medicine, he says. they must still contend with This change in the classes' three semesters worth of cours- character occurred siniultan- es each year for six years, with eously with the emergence of vacations that never exceed two a stereotype in East Quad, months and are sometimes less where freshpersons "Flexies" than one. Cardillo feels that are required to live. While not- unless a student is purely sci- ing that stereotypes are basic- ence oriented, the load is too ally unfair, several East Quad much to bear without a break. residents agreed that Inteflex's nmc o arh I beab a second class could be charac- "Students should be able to terioed cas scoml echaaro- stretch out the six- years," he tenzed as somewhat narrow- seminded, ambitious and elitist. said. "Tey e ntere pro m Inteflexreceives some feder- very young and need more al money, but three-fourth of its years of experience. Maturity is funding is supplied by the state. important to a physician. According to Reed, Michigan Despite these pressures, the spends about one-half million atmosphere is not unusually dollars a year on) the program, competitive, primarily because at least in part because it is the program guarantees a place concerned with the paucity of in medical school. primary care physicians. INTEFLEX freshwoman Kar- After the Inteflex students en Gutkowski says, "Inteflex 1 have been practicing medicine allows noncompetitive students a while, the state will try to to become doctors. I know determine if the program has some cbmpassionate people succeeded in producing more who wouldn't go through a tra- competent clinicians than those ditional, cut-throat pre-med who have travelled the stand- program." ard, pre-med route. The main It distresses Inteflex Direc- advantage of Inteflex is the re- tor Dr. Robert Reed that the duced time it takes to educate program has still not enjoyed doctors, lessening the cost to universal acceptance. society and adding two more "Some faculty work harder at years to the doctor's practice. with SPECIAL GUEST STARS WET, WILLIE 11- and the ELC BA D II RESERVED TICKETS $6.50 AND $5.50 Mail Order Only from Masonic Box Office i i I - I Call TE 2-7100 Canon in D Major by Johann Pachelbel to be performed live by on eight-piece string ensemble FRIDAY, April 16, 1976-12:30 p.m. On The DIAG in front of the graduate library (in case of rain or cold weather, Pendleton room, second floor of the Union at 12:45 p.m.) sponsored by six campus ministries The University of Detroit Office of Student Life and Round House Productions Present Picket lines keep out presidential hopefuls L I I1 (Continued from Page 1) When their amplified voices finally broke through the static and were broadcast in the ball- room convention center, Jack- son predicted he would win the Pennsylvania primary. CARTER said the controversy over his recent remark about "ethnic purity" of neighbor- hoods had not hurt him and Mr. Udall said the three of them- referring to them as the "Big, Three" - were the only ones left in the race who mattered. A fourth contender, Senator Frank Church of Idaho, cancel- led a scheduled appearance due to influenza. The editors did finally get to see Humphrey, whom they greeted warmly. Humphrey, although he said that he had not authorized any- one to campaign for the nomi- nation on his behalf, answered a question on the possibility of entering the primaries by say- ing, "The word 'never' in poli- tics is i very finite word and we ought to be careful how we use it." APRIL 24, 1976 at 7:30 p.m. Subscribe at University of Detroit Memorial Building Confused by the SUMMER SUBLET Game? Featuring the Legendary Blues Guitarist TO oy BUCH Al SIMPLIFY THINGS! THETA XI 1345 Washtenaw with SPECIAL GUEST ATTRACTION c7,,4r I i' ARE E RT GREAT LOCATION (WASHTENAW AT S. UNIV.) COED LIVING-INEXPENSIVE 761-6133-995-8455 , irl tgttn featuring The University of Michigan Jerry LaCroix Also the JAMES COTTON BLUES BAND 'I 446, 4:3alty AUDITIONS for 1976-1977 U 'Eu UU,(~ I I I!1