Probing inside a mental hospital's bureaucracy By JOE SCHECHTER LET'S TAKE a look inside the realm of a mental institution in our state. The hospital environment is segmented, consisting of two adjoining lengthy corridors. A dingy recreation room with a ruptured pool table and a barely audible record player is at the end of one hall. At the other end of the passageway is the main day room and coffee shop, where patients are cramped together, watch television, play games and nourish themselves. Providing the patients perform their tedious tasks, privileges are granted to them - music and occupational therapy, recrea- tion and bus rides to the nearby city. Within the institution, there is a permeating occupational hier- archy of doctors, nurses and attendants-who often demonstrate a regrettable lack of mental and emotional support for their patients. The medical practitioners engage in a surpriisng amount of pencil work and interaction with colleagues, writing diagnoses of patients' conditions. Patients frequently complain that the doctors don't place themselves right down right where the action is-with the patients' mental problems - often enough. EVENTUALLY, THE patients do have appointments with their psychiatrists - but not always with success. One girl was suffering from a deep psychological depression. Her doctor thought that she no longer needed hospitalization. A week later she leaped off the Campus Inn. Another patient said he was lacking his usual strong hetero- sexual drive; he believed it was because of some traumatic event. In therapy he mentioned a dream of having intercourse with his sister. In reply, his analyst indirectly mentioned homosexuality. Anger surged within the boy and he struck his doctor. The next day another analyst asked the confused boy if he experienced any sexual arousal being elevated - climbing stairs or riding in an elevator. Whether or not the doctor's suppositions were accurate, to the patient they representedlearned theorizing and textbook ideas and not an empathetic and intelligent handling of a sexual crisis. MANY PSYCHIATRISTS fasten their safety belts to the schools of psychiatry they studiously indulge in, and present theories be- fore their patients. The patient sadly must learn not to rely too heavily on he learned doctor - the label M.D. and expensive therapeutic training do not render anyone superhuman. The patient's behavior is observed, scrutinized and controlled by the nurses and attendants, who write daily reports on each patient and dispense the prescribed medicine. The patients, though, are often in the dark over what pills they are taking, .Outbursts are not tolerated. One patient exploded in a fit of anger. He was immediately placed in seclusion, after receiving two injections to pacify his "primal scream" for help. Paradoxically, the miniature world in which the patients dwell serves some purpose. For example, when a person is cut, he or she either cries for help or gets out bandages and mercurachrome. In the same way, the mental patient is cut, but not physically. Hope- fully, after the help of doctors, nurses and attendants, the next alternative will be to leave the mental establishment. THESE SEGREGATED people take upon themselves a very strong mental pressure. They realize, though, that help must come from within themselves. The Last Hurrah Letters to The Daily Leaving the service To The Daily: I AM ONE of the 30,000' service- men whose separation from the armed services has been sus- pended for at least 90 days by a Department of the Army mes- sage dated May 15. Those af- fected have been given only two to 45 days advance notice, Many have already shipped all of their household goods, broken their apartment ledsesb obtained civ- ilian jobs or schooling and those individuals serving here in Eur- ope may have already sent their families back to the United States. At a time like this when the U.S. Army is trying to build up its image in order to help at- tain a truly volunteer Army, ac- tions such as this are unbeliev- able. It is my opinion that this action will result in irreparable damage to the image of the U.S. Army and to hopes of evior achievinga volun teer army I wonder how thousands of in- dividuals can be rifted (invol- untarily separated) because the armed forces are overstrength and then shortly afterward 30,- 000 individuals involuntarily ex- tended because someone appar- ently has discovered the serv- ices are actually going to be un- derstrength It appears that the entire arm- ed services strength reduction program has been poorly plan- ned, implemented, and managed from the beginning. Too, many individuals were made eligible for early discharges and approv- al for early outs was apparent- ly given blindly without consider- ing carefully enough the ulti- mate effect on the manpower level of the U.S. Army. T h e early discharges should h a v e initially been made available to' only a limited number of in- dividuals and then gradually ex- tended to cover more and more individuals until the desired strength levels were attained. As a result of this mismanage- ment the plans of 30,000 individ- uals will be adversely affected, The resultant financial and psy- chological effect will be great. A great deal of resentment tow- ards the U.S. Army will undoub- tedly result, affecting on t h e job performance. Some service- maent have even had to ask for a day off from duty for they were incapable of performing their job in their present state of mind. IT IS MY hope that a congres- sional investigation will be made to determine the reasons for this colossal blunder by those re- sponsible for managing t h e strength of the U.S Army and appropriate action taken to in- sure that this never happeos again. I, and I am sure, the other servicement affected by this DA message would sincerely appreciate your writing to con- gress asking for a complete in- vestigation. Larry Larmee, '68 1 Lt, USAR May 18 Heroin and thefts To The Daily: IT IS POSSIBLE to do thingso to avoid being a victim of breik- ing and enterings. Lock your doors and windows and don't put stereo equipment or whatever near a window. But this is not an answer to the problem. Increased police patrols won't really help either. Society has got to start dealihg with the root causes of these kinds of thefts. It is impossible to know how many of the breaking and enterings are related to herein addiction but experience dells Us that the percentage is quite high, possibly well over 50 per cent., Addiction to hard drugs must be decriminalized. Rather, so- ciety must emphasize drug edu- cation, treatment and rehabili- tation: It makes no sense to tell addicts that they are criminals and thus force them to cause a great deal of crime in order to support their habit. Addicts should have a choice between rehabilitation programs, like methadone maintenance, o' as they do in England,-be given free heroin at community health centers. The result would nor The Editorial Page of The Michigan Daily is open to any- one who wishes to submit articles. Generally speaking, all articles should be less than 1,000 words. be increased heroin addiction, but rather less, and the crime rate would go down markedly. Unfortunately the law and or- der freaks will yell we can't handcuff the police and tell us the answer is just more ard more police in the street. These same people will denounce the only real solution, and there- fore must be blamed for much of the crime against person and property. -Jerry De Grieck City Council Member First Ward June 14 Introducing the new life art By LARRY DWORIN TERE IS A revolution in the making - a re- volution not of politics, but of art. Life Art encompasses everything: all art, and yet much more. The Life Artist paints with pain, composes death, and organizes destruction. Everything that exists is a valid medium, everything that could be the final end, and the very fabric of life itself the end creation. Destruction, for example, has perhaps the broad- est potential not only as an art medium, but as a distinct form in its own right. It is perhaps the only medium that is both fluid and permanent. Fluid, like music, in that it is in the actual act of destruction in which we may find beauty, and yet permanent, like sculpture, for it leaves an enduring finished product. It is this twofold nature of destruction which establishes it as a separate and distinct art form, for it is not concerned only with a finished pro- duct, but with its creation as well. Thus a work of Life Art might be a Stuka dive-bombing a build- ing,. A properly handled Stuka is a poem of sound and movement in itself. What else simultaneously combines almost the very essence of both free- dom and power? The bomb drops, giving life to inanimate matter as the building - perhaps the very earth itself - rears and bucks under the unleashed force. And finally, only then - the ruins. WHAT ARE THEY trying to show us, those broken fingers of steel pointing at the sky? What message lies at the bottom of the crater? What symbolism in the patterns of masonry scattered about the landscape. Do not say there can be none, for this is not the random bolt of lightning or the meaningless shiftings of the earth.- This is a work of art, carefully planned, painstakingly executed. There was a reason for the use of a Stuka, a reason for that building and that choice of bomb. Nothing was left to chance, every stone fell in its preordained place. This combination of factors provides the onlooker with an experi- ence which is highly meaningful and of almost unequalled depth and intensity. Who can say, then, that this is not an art form the equal of any in existence today? And this analysis of destruction might be ex- tended to pain, to death, and to their synthesis in war. This, then, is the barest essence of Life Art. It takes all the, facets of human experience and combines them to form the most profound and meaningful experience for an individual who does not merely observe it, but lives it. It is the shap- ing and coloring not merely of canvas or clay, but of reality, LIFE ART is what history should have been but never was: it is the organizing and structur- ing of human lives and events through purposive thought, rather than just allowing them to happen. Who can say these things have any less meaning because they are engineered by human artists rather than by God? Pain as well as pleasure, destruction as well as creation, death as well as life all must have an important and meaningful place in the overall picture. The possibilities of Life Art in today's world are endless. Modern technology has made possible the creation of literally millions of situations, per- haps a totally different one for each person. The artist will have the ultimate in latitude and power - the ability to shape not merely inani- mate objects, but lives. No longer must art suit the real world - the real world will be made to suit art. WE THUS DO away with the greatest of human bonds: Reality. In its place we create not some saccharine Utopia, but a world in which every life can be a perfect work of art. NOTE: Larry Dworin is a freshman at Wayne State University, studying the at' of history. NIGHT EDITOR: JAN BENEDETTI _ ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR: JIM O'BRIEN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR' ROSEYSUE BERSTEIN PHOTO TECHNICIAN; JIM WALLACE