The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 11, 1980-Page 3 FUNDS TARGETED FOR CITIES, HEALTH 'State of the state' well received LANSING (UPI) - Gov. William, illiken's upbeat State of the State Ad- dress received some good reviews yesterday, but there were hints his plans to help decaying cities and boost mental health spending face close scrutiny. Milliken told a joint session of the legislators he will seek no tax hikes this year, opting instead to make room for new initiatives in a tight budget year by lashing old programs. AND THE 57-year-old governor departed from the prepared text of his 12th State of the State message to assure lawmakers he has not lost his zest for the task-an apparent rebuttal to charges he is "tired out" and to dispel the notion he is a lame duck. "I think I have the best job in the world," he said. "I like it and I hope I can continue to work with you for a few more years." MILLIKEN said several Republican presidential hopefuls have talked with him about the vice presidency, but he does not take the offers seriously and is not interested, according to yesterday's Lansing State Journal. Milliken's name has cropped up per- sistently as a vice presidential prospect, but he has denied all interest in the post. "Comments have been dropped, sub- tleties, references are made but I un- derstand why candidates do that. It's part of the game," he told the newspaper. SENATE DEMOCRATIC Leader William Faust said he was "very im- pressed" with the governor's State of the State remarks. Senate Republican Floor Leader Donald Bishop said Milliken "struck a fine balance between economy and compassion." House Speaker Bobby Crim, who gave his own forecast for the year Wednesday, said he and Milliken agree on the basic problems facing the state. MILLIKEN SAID he will recommend a new $40 million aid program for so- called "distressed cities"-those with high concentrations of elderly and poor residents and declining populations and tax bases. He also called for more than tripling expenditures on programs designed to move mental patients out of large in- stitutions and into more normal, residential-style settings. Milliken said prison construction and welfare expenditures also will have a high priority. HE ANNOUNCED plans to further streamline government by con- solidating community and economic development in the state Commerce Department and moving more regulatory agencies such as the Liquor Control Commission and the Insurance Bureau from Commerce to the Depar- tment of Licensing and Regulation. The governor called for major refor- ms in the state's horse racing industry and said he will establish a special commission to coordinate efforts to bat- tle organized crime and government corruption. Despite the looming recession and pending budget cuts, Milliken said the state of the state is "good" and con- trasted conditions here with those he viewed on a recent tour of Cambodian refugee camps in Thailand. "Christ: The Light Shining in Darkness" a lecture by Robert W. Jeffery member of The Board of Lectureship of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Mass. to be held Sunday January 13, 1980 3:00-4:00 p.m. First Church of Christ, Scientist 1833 Washtenow, Ann Arbor child care and parking available Visiting team reviews 'U' for accreditation By ADRIENNE LYONS A team of nine educators from the North Central Association is spending its final day on campus today examining evaluation procedures at the University for an accreditation review. The review, which is conducted every ten years, focuses on the Office of Academic Affairs and Office of Student Services (OSS) at the University. Members of the team will issue a report on their findings later in the semester to University President Harold Shapiro. The University also conducted its own study in the areas of Academic Affairs and Student Services. Each department and program is evaluated by its parent school or college, Mims said, but "only professional schools are subject to ac- creditation by their own associations." The Law School, for example, is evaluated by the American Bar Association. Mims said other schools, such as LSA, are not accredited. For this reason, only Academic Affairs will be reviewed. Mims said Student Services also will be evaluated because of its "potential direct impact on the students" because of its various units, such as counseling and housing. What's so sacred about your room? Let it rest in darkened gloom. If you're the last one-punch out the lights. Help us stop the energy bite! Anon. Milliken ... not interested in v.p. post eRunaway Mexican oil, well slowing down 'The North Central Association acts as student consumer advocates, ensuring that universities offer quhality programs.' -R. Sue Mims, director of the University's Office of Acaderic Planning and Analysis r UM Second Annual CIUDAD DEL CARMEN, Mexico (AP) - Directly over the blowout, the normally blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico burble and boil, forced six feet to the air by the force of the escaping oil. A three-foot crown of flame tops the murky fountain. Yesterday, Ixtoc I spewed 50,000 more gallons of rusty-colored crude oil into the Gulf, but Pemex, the Mexican oil monopoly, says the flow from the world's worst oil' spill has slowed and the well may be sealed this month. "THE FLOW IS now running about 1,000 to 1,500 barrels a day," said a top ' gineer from Pemex, which has lost ore than 110 million gallons of oil sin- ce the well blew out last June 3. A barrel contains 42 gallons of oil. This is not the first time Pemex has expressed optimism about stopping the well. And the company's flow figures have been questioned by U.S. experts. In October, when Pemex said the flow had been cut to 2,000 barrels a day, U.S. scientists testifying before a congressional panel in Washington said e real figure was closer to 50,000 barrels. But U.S. officials say there is no independent way to determine just how much oil is spilling. "ONE OF THE two relief wells is complete and has reached the two-mile depth of Ixtoc's reservoir, and we are pumping in sea water. The other well should be completed within 20 days," said the engineer, who asked not to be identified. Drillers hope that pumping sea water nto the reservoir will equalize the pressure forcing oil out of the well, slowing the flow enough so they can cap Ixtoc. Pemex has spent millions of dollars trying to stop the oil, but Americans under contract to Pemex here say it is time - not effort - that has cut the flow. "THERE IS no doubt once both the 'elief wells are in, Ixtoc will be stopped, 'ut the Mexican government can't claim victory. Ixtoc is just slowing down by itself," said one American, who requested anonymity. Ixtoc obviously has slowed. Instead of surfacing in a turbulent 100-foot-wide circle, it has been reduced to a ring 40 feet in diameter. Instead of gushing more than 30 feet into the air, it rises about six feet above the surface, with flames burning perhaps three feet above that. Cecil Parker II, a diver with Under- water Services of Corpus Christi, Texas, dove to Ixtoc's mouth last week. He said the slick is about six feet thick near the surface, considerably less than last year. "I should have seen some dead fish there somewhere, but I didn't. I just can't figure it out," P'arker said. The well is still feeding a two- by three-mile slick - located 55 miles from this shrimping village in the Bay of Campeche - and the-slick is slowly moving westward. THE UNIVERSITY belongs to North Central Association, a regional organization, which reviews member colleges and universities for ac- creditation, said R. Sue Mims, director of the University's Office of Academic Planning and Analysis. Because the University is so large, the review will focus only on the evaluations conducted within Academic Affairs and OSS at the University. Mims said although it is "theoretically" possible that the University would not be reaccredited, she said she doubted that would occur. "The North Central Association acts as student consumer advocates, en- suring that universities offer quality programs, particularly new in- stitutions," said Mims. "That's less directly applicable to the University." BUT MIMS added that with declining budgets, the possibility that an in- stitution may offer programs of lesser quality increases. In addition, Mims noted that "student Services has developed a program evaluation process (PEC) which fit in with the theme of the reaccreditation period." Academic Affairs and OSS prepared reports based on internal studies such as the PEC to submit to members of the team. THREE YEARS ago, Student Ser- vices conducted its first PEC question- naire for its staff, said Kathleen Dan- nemiller, assistant to the vice-president for Student Services. Based on a similar questionnaire used by Academic Affairs, the PEC asked unit heads to predict the status of their departments during the next five yers. Another portion of the Student Ser- vices report to the North Central team was a Fundamental Evaluation Research project in which Student Ser- vices staffers were interviewed anonymously about their units to prevent any untruthfulness in the an- swers, Dannemiller said. The members of the visiting team, which arrived here Wednesday, have been interviewing staff members from Academic Affairs, and OSS. Team members also have been talking to various deans in the University's schools and colleges, department chairs, and student leaders. BAHAMAS (Nassau) SPRING BREAK MARCH 2-9 with hotel $3b3 * based on quad occupancy-Sheraton B.C. AIR ONLY$79 Detroit-Nassau-Detroit via Eastern Airlines scheduled flights Space very limited. Book immediately. Also Windsor-Ft. Lauderdale charter space availabale March 2-10. Air only $169 including tax. Hotel Packages available upon request. Applications besiege test-tube baby clinic Travel Consultants 216 S. Fourth Avenue Ann Arbor, MI 48107 (313) 7691776 NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - A Pen- nsylvania woman who stands 5-foot-3. and weighs 220 pounds promised to lose 70 pounds if she could get her name on the waiting list for a test-tube baby at Eastern Virginia Medical School. But a caller from Detroit insisted that being No. 2,500 in line just wasn't good enough. "Can I bribe you to put my name at the top of the list?" she asked. "WHAT DO YOU mean?" asked Lin- da Lynch, a secretary for the test-tube baby clinic. "I've got lots of money," the woman replied. "I'm willing to offer you anything you want." Since the state approved plans Tuesday for the nation's first test-tube baby laboratory, the clinic in the ob- stetrics-gynecology department at the medical school has been besieged with phone calls. THEY'VE COME in from Maine to California - some from abroad. A spokesman for a right-to-life group criticized the program as raising serious moral and ethical questions and said his group would consider filing suit in an effort to block the clinic. By Wednesday evening, four secretaries estimated they'd answered at least 300 inquiries from current and prospective patients all over the coun- try. The clinic keeps names of callers confidential. LYNCH TURNED down the bribe of- fer from the woman in Detroit. "THere are just too many desperate people out there for me to have helped that one person," she explained. Even before the laboratory, to be built at Norfolk General Hospital, won state approval, the clinic had a waiting list 2,500 names long. ONCE THE LAB is completed, of- ficials say, the program will be able to serve about 50 couples in its first year, at a cost of about $4,000 for two fer- tilization attempts. So the chances are remote for any new couple on the waiting list to con- ceive in the near future. Does it really have to be this way? Not if you do your book rush buying at Ulrich's. Ulrich's has polite, friendly employees who will find your books for you and help you with your other supplies. And you won't have to hock your sirloin to pay for them. ~ I. , FILMS School of Public Health-Noontime Film Fest, What Price Health?, 12:10 p.m., SPH II. Alternative Action Film Group-The Buddy Holly Story, 4, 7, and 9 p.m., MLB 4. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Bananas, 7, 10:20 p.m.; What's Up Tiger Lily?, 8:40p.m.; MLB3. Mediatrics-The In-Laws, 7, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. If you are serious about Law School, you can't afford not to consider our time-proven program. We offer you more: