.Q The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 15, 1981-Page 9 STUDENTHEALTH Q. A. QUESTION: Where can I get a wide variety of health care services, without running up a big bill? ANSWER: At University Health Service, across Fletcher Ave. from the Michigan League. We're student-funded, so there are no charges for enrolled students for most of our services, and our Pharmacy sells items practically at cost. Call 764-8325 for clinic appointments. QUESTION: Where can my spouse get health care? ANSWER: Students' spouses and dependents 14 years of age or older can use UHS for their regular health care, by enroll- ing in the UHS prepaid health care plan. Call 763-4384 or 763-2426 for informnation on this plan. QUESTION: If students are funding University Health Service, how can we get involved in making sure it is serving students' needs? ANSWER: Join the Student Health Advisory Committee. It meets regularly at UHS, surveying student health care con- cerns and providing student representation in Univ. Health Service's administration. For information about the SHAC, call 763-4384. APPhoto Future cheerleaders Although these young men look like they are lining up for the start of a marathon, they actually are preparing for an acrobatic stunt recently at Funabashi City, near Tokyo. HEALTH SERVICE- We've got answers to your questions! I .Anti-nuke demonstrators Acacia Fraternity tQ blockade plant today SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP)- Leaders of 3,000 anti- uclear protesters encamped here said yesterday they are eady to begin a blockade to disrupt the firing up of the $2.3 billion Diablo Canyon atomic power plant. Mark Evanoff, a spokesman for the Abalone Alliance, an, umbrella organization for about 58 anti-nuclear groups represented here, said the protest will begin today, "if everyone is ready. "I THINK' everybody is close to ready and if anyone is not, I think those problems can be solved in a matter of hours," Evanoff said. The California Highway Patrol estimated up to 3,000 demonstrators had massed at a tent city and other lodgings near the seaside plant. About 500 National Guardsmen and hundreds of state troopers and local police were stationed at a nearby military base. "PEOPLE ARE really excited," Evanoff said. "The energy is really high in the camp." . Evanoff said the demonstrators were making final preparations, with a series of "readiness-check" meetings. The demonstrators intend to blockade the plant located at vila Beach on the rugged Pacific coast about midway bet- ween San Francisco and Los Angeles when about 300 em- ployees report for work today. THEY HAVE GATHERED at a campsite on private land owned by the Pacific Gas & Electric Co., owners of the plant. Organizers of the protest have never officially said how many demonstrators were expected, although PG&E of- ficials had been planning for as many as 30,000. The flow of demonstrators into the camphad diminished to a trickle by late Sunday, according to Highway Patrol spokesman Ron Henn. ABOUT 300 workers are scheduled to report to the plant today, Sumner said, but actual testing is not scheduled to begin until after the Nuclear Regulatory Commission meets next Monday for a final vote on granting a low-power test license. The NRC is expected to accept the recommendation of its Atomic Safety Licensing Board that the plant be allowed to load fuel and operate at 5 percent of capacity. The utility contends the plant is needed to meet power demands, but protesters contend the presence of an ear- thquake fault 2.5 miles away from the site makes operation of the facility too dangerous. Many are also opposed to nuclear plants in general. Domestic spending due for more cuts, WASHINGTON (AP) - Having already scaled down his planned in- reases for defense, President Reagan yed further cuts in domestic spending yesterday and an aide said they could include reductions in "entitlement" programs such as Social Security. "We face the choice of taking drastic action or inviting economic calamity," the president said. Even so, he said, the reductions can be achieved "without any damage to nyof government's vital services." The president's deputy press secretary, Larry Speakes, declined to rule out Social Security as one of the areas where additional cuts would be made. He said the total reduction in the, upcoming fiscal '1982 budget would be less than $1$ billion. Later, after White House chief of staff James Baker III conferred with Republican Senate leaders, Speakes said "we've agreed to look into the possibility of including entitlements." Entitlements are government ,rgrams, including Social Security, Medicaid, and food stamps, under which spending is governed by law. . Speakes, who had to reverse an earlier declaration that "right now there are no plans for further cuts in en- titlements in '82," said there has been "some sentiment" on Capitol Hill to reduce the entitlement programs in the iscal year beginning Oct. 1. From a meeting with conservative congressional Democrats to a lunch with House Speaker Thomas O'Neill and the House Republican leader, the president paid heed to budgetary mat- ters, even as he presided at a ceremony officially proclaiming the bicentennial celebration of the revolutionary victory at Yorktown. "At home, our enemy is no longer redcoats but red ink," Reagan said. "After 19 deficits in the last 20 years and a national debt of nearly a trillion dollars, we face the choice of taking drastic action or inviting economic calamity," Reagan said. "Our -ad- ministration and I think the American people have the resolve to do what we know is right and what we know must be done. Make no mistake. We will." "I believe the spirit of Yorktown and the spirit of our revolution is still alive and well in America. I'm confident that if we work together and reason together and stick together, then just like our forefathers, we'll be all right," he said. Speakes said "right now there are no plans for further cuts in entitlements in '82.1" Entitlements are the federal programs,'including Social Security and food stamps, for which spending is governed by law. At the same time, Speaks pointed out that "there are problems with Social Security." The administration has said the Social Security System faces a shortfall by late next year unless its in- come or allocations are changed. Asked whether the administration was going to leave to the Democratic majority in the House the task of proposing Social Security spending cuts or higher contributions from wage ear- ners, the spokesman replied with a grin: "I've said all I'm going to say." STAY ON TOP OF THE NEWS... 0 I I SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY! PATRIOTISM is just one of the reasons UM students explore ROTC For information call: Cpt. Pearson 764-2400/01 S P E C IA 9 a.m.-5, Michigan Union Lobby Over 600 diffe Prices: MOST LARGE PRINTS I RES: ESCHER'S ROCKWELL'S CINEMA POSTERS, AMERICAN CLASSICS ROSAMOND, GREGG We Also Have Mats! 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