Page 2-Sunday, February 14, 1982-The Michigan Daily Hermitage houses fundraiser By ANNE MYTYCH The Hermitage, a 65-year-old Ann Arbor mansion, will serve as the center of a fund raising "Decorator's Showcase" for the University's School of Art during the next few weeks. The house, which was once a frater- nity house and is currently for sale, has been redecorated by a number of Ann Arbor interior design firms for the showcase. Admission will be charged and all proceeds from the show will go to the art school's Guy Palazzola Memorial Scholarship Fund. PALAZZOLA was a University art professor and associate dean of the art school. Palazzola, who died in 1978, was most famous for his nationally broadcast painting demonstrations. Marguerite Oliver, a former student of Palazzola's organized the redecoration of the Hermitage back in October because there were no scholar- ships for the art school and she wanted to organize a general.scholarship fund. The interior design firms have been working on remodeling the inside of the house for the past few months. A wide variety of antiques and art work, along with the newly redecorated rooms, will be included in the show. ORIGINAL artwork by professor Palazzola will also be exhibited in the Hermitage. The antiques and artwork are valued at more than $1 million and will be on sale during the showcase. The Hermitage, which, is located at 1808 Hermitage Road, is included on a list of some 40 historic Ann Arbor lan- dmarks, all of which are a part of the Washtenaw-Hill Historical District. The house is also included on an Ann Arbor historic house tour. Under the direction of University art Prof. Dwayne Overmeyer, students in the Art Production Workshop are preparing a brochure for the showcase, along with designer admissioni tickets. Floor plans created by University in- terior design students will appear in the brochures. WITH THE HELP of Ann Arbor Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL part of the "Decorator's Showcase" SUE BAY INTERIORS decorated this third floor room at the Hermitage as designed to raise money for the School of Art. resident June Handy and Professor Palazzol'a's widow Louise, Oliver sear- ched for a house to develop for fund raising. They finally found the Hermitage, which was up for sale by its owner Jesse Gorden, a University professor of social work. The house was previously owned by the Phi Sigma Delta frater- nity. Oliver then sent letters to interior design firms from Ann Arbor to invite them to help re-design the Hermitage. They began their work in late October. The 30-room house, nearly finished with its redecoration, will go on public display today. There will also be floral arrangemen- ts and sculptures at the showcase. The theme of thesValentine's Day opening is "arts and flowers." THE SHOWCASE, which will con- tinue for a month, will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Satur- day, and from noon to 4 p.m. on Sun- days. Admission is $5 for adults and $2.50 for senior citizens, students, and children. All proceeds will go to the Guy Palazzola Scholarship Fund. At various times throughout the length of the showcase there will be live music and cooking demonstrations. Beverages, snacks, and lunch will be served daily in a cafe in the garden room. In 1978 there was a similar "Decorator's Showcase" at the Hoover Mansion on Washtenaw Ave. That showcase netted proceeds of $75,000, which was used for the construction of five intensive care units at the Univer- sity's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Polish regime guards against protest WARSAW, Poland- The martial law regime deployed tanks, armored cars, water cannon and heavy police patrols yesterday to guard against possible protests as military rule entered its third month in Poland. The communist authorities also slapped a 25-year jail sentence on a for- mer official convicted of spying for the CIA and rejected proposals to let Solidarity chief Lech Walesa attend the christening of his seventh child. Beefed-up police units checked drivers' identity cards in Warsaw, and ap- peared in greater numbers than usual on the streets. Hundreds of police vehicles wound through Warsaw Thursday and Friday evenings. Travelers from the Baltic port of Gdansk said police threw a tight ring of trucks and water cannon around the monument to workers outside the Lenin shipyards, where the now-suspended independent union Solidarity was born 18 months ago. Pope celebrates Mass in Nigeria ONITSHA, Nigeria- Pope John Paul II went to Nigeria's Christian hear- tland yesterday, a land once ravaged by the Biafran civil war, and told an audience of 1 million youths to reject birth control and abortion in West Africa's most populous nation. On the second day of an eight-day tour of Africa, his first foreign trip since last May's attempt on his life, the pontiff arrived by helicopter at an open field recently cleared from the tropical rain forest. In his sermon, the pontiff called for "unity, compassion and forgiveness" among Nigeria's 95 million people, 30 million of whom are Moslem. Of the nation's 18 million Christians, 5 million to 6 million are Roman Catholic. Many Nigerians practice various forms of spirit and ancestor worship. John Paul had a lesson in good citizenship for them. "Identify the ills of your society, such as bribery and corruption, the em- bezzlement of government or company funds," he said. Jurors inspect Atlanta bridge ATLANTA- Jurors inspected a two-lane river bridge yesterday where accused killer Wayne Williams allegedly threw his victims into the muddy waters of the Chattahoochee River. Williams, a 23-year-old freelance photographer, is standing trial for the murders of Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, and Nathaniel Cater, 27, two of 28 young Atlanta blacks abducted and slain during a 22-month period. Testimony has linked him to 10 additional slayings. The jurors made the trip to the bridge at the request of the defense, which apparently hopes to prove that prosecution witnesses could not have seen all they claimed to have seen because of underbrush, height of bridge railings and other factors. South African blacks march in honor of white union leader JOHANNESBURG, South Africa- Some 2,000 defiant blacks marched five miles through Johannesburg's wealthy white suburbs yesterday to bury the white man who helped organize their union and was found hanged in a jail cell. Prime Minister P.W. Botha's security forces made no move to intervene, though the two-hour march was illegal and unprecedented under the white- minority government's strict security laws. "I am stunned. It's incredible," said Aubrey Aggett, 69, father of 28-year- old Neil Aggett, the first white to die in detention in a South African jail. Some of the marchers, walking ahead of the funeral cortege, changed "Botha is a terrorist!" and tore down election posters for Botha's National Party, which is in the middle of a municipal election campaign in Johan- nesburg. Vol. XCII, No. 112 Sunday, February 14, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan; 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13, by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan body is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service.Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552; 76-DAILY. Sports desk. 764.0562 Circulation. 7640558: Classified Advertising, 764-0557. Display odvertising, 764-0554: Billing.764-0550 Minorities must pool clout, speaker says By NATHANIEL WARSHAY Minorities must consolidate their economic clout in order to gain equality in the American economic system, according to Rev. George Riddick, vice president of the Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity). Riddick, speaking Friday night to a group of 25 people at the University's Trotter House, urged blacks to pool their resources and use their combined economic influence to win a greater share of influen- ce in U.S. corporations. "IT MAKES little sense for 28 million people (America's blacks) not to renegotiate their position. with the nation," Riddick said. He said that the $145 billion. spent annually by American blacks in the trillion-dollar American economy should be used as a bargaining tool in the effort to gain power with U.S. corporations. American corporate leaders still discriminate against blacks, Riddick claimed, as is evidenced by the small number of blacks in high-level management positions of major U.S. corporations. He said there were only two blacks in positions of treasurer or greater importance in all of the cor- porations on the Fortune 500 list. He also cited the example of the Atlanta-based Coca-Cola corporation, which he said has a large por- tion of its sales in black communities, but which has no franchises owned by blacks. THE SOLUTION for this inequity, he said, is the pooling of money in savings and loans. In this way, the savings of blacks can be borrowed by other blacks and reinvested in the black community. Until the black community can achieve economic equality through this pooling, however, Riddick said he agrees that measures such as affirmative action are necessary. Affirmative action, and other programs that grant special assistance to minorities, cannot serve as a final solution to discrimination, he said, but can help in the interim until blacks can gain equality. Riddick also criticized the Reagan administration for the emphasis he said it places on military spen- ding -at the expense of social programs which traditionally helped minorities. POETRY READING with DOTTIE JONES and Friends Monday, February 15 8 p.m. GUILD HOUSE -802 Monroe ADMISSION FREE Med school enrollment cuts stir doubt (Continued from Page 1) he expects no minority student reduc- tions in the total enrollment. According to Sylvester Berki, chair- man of the School of Public Health's Department of Medical Care Organization, the reductions "will have Stephen Lachs Agay judge's look at "The Moral Majority" and civil rights Sunday, February 14, at 4 p.m. in the Lawyer's Club Lounge Reception willfollow sponsored by: M.S.A., Law School Speakers Committee, Lesbian/Gay Law Students. no effect on health care or health care costs in Michigan." Chip Truscon, a former member of the Comprehensive Health Planning Commission of Southeastern Michgan, a citizens's advisory council, said that since the proportion of physicians in the United States will continue to be one of the highest in the world, "there won't be any effect on the rural or urban areas." ACCORDING to Truscon, "the main problem is a maldistribution of doc- tors," adding that national studies show that physicians tend to congregate in the suburbs, neglecting rural and big city areas. Truscon suggested as an answer to the maldistribution problem that physicians should be told where to prac- tice as part of their licensure. GETTH WRDOUT BY PLACING AN AD IN Summer'Sublet Suplement I - Nome _ I dI Address ' Phone **"I ' " Mail or bring in person ' this clipping and payment ' to 420 Maynard Street. ' * I o "There's no room for free enterprise in medicine," Truscon said. "It's about time physicians gave up their monopoly on truth, justice, and the American way. they have an obligation to the community since their education is in- directly subsidized by society." Truscon maintains that while the reduction may be unappealing to many medical educators, "the enrollment cutbacks is a cosmetic change of a political and economic necessity." ACCORDING to experts in medical education, economic necessity may also start a trend into the more highly specialized medical fields, thus in- creasing health care costs. They say that in order to pay for today's soaring tuitions, students may be forced to choose the high-paying specialities rather than the less lucrative fields that are more desperately needed, such as family medicine. "That trend," said state senator and physician Edward Pierce, "is already here. Higher education is pricing itself right out of the market. Society has to be more responsible for the education of physicians and all professionals." Dean Gronvall responded, "I like that idea, but every influential force is going the other way." - f Find Insight Editor-in-Chief.-...................DAVID MEYER Managing Editor---..-.-. -. 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