Clinic. By VICKI HENDERSON A new five-day program to help people quit smoking-cold turkey-is reported to be nearly 80 per cent suc- cessful up to six months following initial treatment, said Don Powell, founder of Smoke Stopper's clinic. The behavior modification techniques developed by Powell have been tested and proven successful on a variety of people. POWELL, A BEHAVIOR modification instructor at the Univer- sity before opening his clinic in February 1975, devised his method from "behavior modification literature and drawing on my own knowledge of human behavior and motivation," he said. The treatment was first tested last summer and. involved students, University staff and some members of the community. Of the students involved in the program, 100 per cent quit smoking af- ter five days, and 76.5 per cent still were not smoking after six months. Smokers don't have to have an The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 16, 1979-Page 5 may help smokers quit msf ul are short-term smokers, said Powell. Al ost80% s c The clinic also offers assistance in reinforcing non-smoking "above and "overwhelming desire" to quit, said the clinic to smoke during the sessions _ beyond the five-day period," said Powell, although it is helpful if the in- but is "designed to take the pleasure Powell. It offers "maintenance dividual is willing to stop. He said the out of cigarettes," said Powell. procedures" in the form of support success rate of the program is greatly Powell, who left the University in groups. reduced when people have no desire to April, said smoking is becoming "Their (the support groups) stop smoking. But, he said, "people get "socially unacceptable." Many times philosophy is much like that of hooked and get motivated to be suc- people will light up a cigarette to Alcoholics Anonymous," said Powell. cessful" once they participate in the "change some emotional state" such as The groups give people a chance to ex- sessions. anger or depression, he explained, press their feelings now that they've THE BEHAVIOR modification tech- POWELL SAID there has been an quit," and the opportunity to see that niques are designed to prevent cigaret- "increase in health awareness," and other people are going through similar te urges from arising and also to that people now realize the dangers of experiences, he added. eliminate discomfort if such urges do heart disease, chronic bronchitis, and POWELL SAID results have shown occur, Powell said. The techniques in- emphazema, as well as cancer. an average of only 4.6 pounds in weight volve a combination of self-control, Powell said his success rate has been gain. He said people have also reported substitute behavior such as deep "as high or higher" when working with feelings of greater calm, and some even breathing (which imitates the actual groups of college students than when decreased consumptionm of alcoholic smoking of a cigarette), relaxation working with the public at large. With beverages. exercises, and thought control, to college students, he said, the benefits of Smoke Stopper's clinic is offered as a prepare individuals for situations not smoking can be easily identified. group plan once every two months where they might normally smoke or be For example, he said, they "can play a through St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital. tempted to light upa cigarette. third game of racquetball." There is a free explanatory session and There is a "negative smoking Another reason for the higher rate of the fee for four consecutive sessions is procedure" that allows participants in success is that college students often $80 per person, said Powell. Individual treatment at the clinic costs $170. Campus co-ops get faeelift throug hHUD By TIMOTHY YAGLE Residents of central campus co-ops will find their buildings have undergone a $1 million facelift when they return this fall, according to an Inter- cooperative Council 1ICC) spokesman. The $1 million comes to the ICC in the form of a low interest loan from the federal government's College Housing Program, part of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), according to ICC Rehabilitation Director Lewis Howie. HOWIE SAID repair work on 12 of the 14 central campus co-ops begun last week, includes stripping and replastering walls, installing fire doors and smoke alarms, overlaying exposed wires and fixing plumbing. Howie said students moving into co- ops in the fall will not be inconvenien- ced by the repairs, since the work is scheduled for completion by September 3, Labor Day. The work is "fairly extensive," ICC treasurer Ed Trombley said. "This kind of work won't be needed again for many years," he said. "MOST OF THE work is done on the big systems (such as electricity or plumbing) so none of it is directly related to students' abuse," Trombley said. Trombley said the houses are getting old and have never been renovated. "We basically want to modernize the houses," said Mike Maronitch of But- cher-Willets, Inc., one of the three firms doing the repair work. MARONITCH SAID it was possible the three contractors may run into ex- tra costs in doing the repair work, because "there's always something in an old house that you can't see" that has to be repaired. The $1 million loan comes from the College Housing Program of the federal government's department of Housing and Urban Development, according to ICC rehabilitation director Howie. Howie said the ICC had received a $2.4 million loan from HUD, due over a period of 30 years, but $1.4 million of the loan will go to pay back money loaned to the ICC in the past, Howie said. The loans will not affect rents at Ann Arbor co-ops, Howie said, because the amount of interest the ICC will have to pay each year on loans is increased by only 10per cent as a result of this loan. But Howie added that the loans are not grants. "Nobody's ever said, 'You don't have to pay it back'." Reduced Rates For iiaords Every day to 6 p.m. at the UNION Minority conferene Dr. Francis F. Kornegay, president director. of the Detroit urban League, presented The conference was sponsored by the the introductory address at a conferen- University's Program of Educational ce on "The Recruitment and Em- Opportunity to assist school district ployment of Minority Educators" last personnel representatives and week at the League. minority job candidates in meeting Kornegay discussed the roles schools each other. can play in promoting the concept of equal employment opportunity, as well PRINCIPLESof as the need for minority educators to PRN IL S f serve as role models for both minority Wholistic Education as well as non-minority students. A University alumnus, Kornegay has Public Library - May 18 been with the Detroit Urban League for 7:30pm FREE 35 years, including 18 as its executive SUMMERTIME '79 a program of fun for children ages 2 V to 10 years (daily 7:30 am to 5:30pm) Clonlara Register now 1289 Jewett for all or part Ann Arbor of summerr 769-4511