Court orders fiscal audit ,for city health center By CHERYL BAACKE A court decision handed down yester- day in favor of the city of Ann Arbor will force officials of the former Model Cities Health Center to allow a com- plete audit of their financial records. The decision is the result of charges filed against the clinic's officials by Mayor Louis Belcher and the Ann Ar- bor City Council for not properly repor- ting all of the center's income. THE CENTER HAD been receiving Community Development Block Grant funds until 1981, when the city closed it down because the clinic's officials refused to consent to an audit of their records. Belcher said the audit was requested because the city, which administered the federal funds, requires audits of all agencies receiving government money. Emma Wheeler, former mayor Albert Wheeler's wife, was inrcharge of the center. During the trial, which en- ded last month, she testified that only half of the clinic's patient fees were reported to the city. She said the other half was used to create a fund to make the agency self-sustaining. JUDGE EDWARD Deake criticized the way Wheeler reported the clinic's income in his written decision. "The city was clearly misled by the type of reporting made to it," he wrote. Attorneys for the city said all of the fees should have been reported. Wheeler's lawyer, Philip Green, said the city does not have the right to audit what the facility made in patient fees or donations. DEAKE SAID an audit is necessary "to determine whether Model Cities breached its trust and whether its cash and assets are purely private funds or are infused with some grant money." His decision also said that if no fraud or misrepresentation by the center is found, "equity will be satisfied since there has been a full disclosure of the facts." Belcher said he believes the center had at least $200,000 in extra funds when it was closed down by the city. The audit will determine how much, if any, of that money is federal funds. The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 2, 1983-Page 3 Come on, Bessie! An unidentified motorist in southwest Topeka, Kan. yesterday tries to tow his car after six inches of snow was dumped on the city. H APPENINGS Highlight The Fine Arts Repertory Company of Community High School will present "West Side Story," tonight in the school auditorium. The performance begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are $4.00 for students and $5.00 for adults. Films Hill St. Cinema - Kelly's Heroes, 7 & 9:30 p.m., 1429 Hill Street. Department of Anthropology - The Nuer and The Cowes of Dolo and Ken Paye: Resolving Conflicts Among the Kpelle, 7 p.m., Lecture Room 2, MLB. Classic Film Theatre - To Catch a Thief, 78:30 p.m., North by Northwest 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Cinema Guild - The Brothers Karamazof, 7 and 9:40 p.m., Lorch Hall. Cinema Two - Hud, 7 p.m., Cool Hand Luke, 9 p.m., MLB 3. German Dept. - The Compromise, 8:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Performances School of Music - Jean Schnieder, piano recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers Center for Russian and East European Studies - William Zimmerman, "The Soviet Military Project: A Real Introduction," noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Center for Afroamerican and African Studies - Shirley Hatchett, "Black Men and Women: Attitudes Toward Familial Roles, Conjugal Living, and Marriage," noon, 246 Lorch. . Economics Dept. - Dr. Hans Ehrbar, "Why Does a Bourgeois State Need Elections?" 7 p.m., 447 Mason. Center for Continuing Education for Women-"Developing Employer-Ef- fective Resumes," 7p.m., CEW Library. University Test Preparation Service - Introductory Seminar for LSAT and GMAT, 4 p.m., Michigan Union, conf. Room 4. Fusion Energy Foundation - "Beam Weapons: The Science to 'revei Nuclear War," 7:30 pm., Vandenberg Room, Michigan League. Dept. of Industrial and Operations Engineering - Brian Talbot, "Japanese Productivity and Manufacturing Methods," 4 p.m., 421 W. Engine. International Center - "Tailoring Your-European Trip to You," noon, 603 E. Madison. Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Introduction to MTS File Editor, IV - Advanced User's Overview," 3:30 p.m., 176 BSAD. Dept. of Chemistry - Raymond Yoder, "Supercritical Fluid Chromatography," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Bldg. College of Engineering - James Wilkes, "The Amdahl 5860 Computer and the Michigan Terminal System, 7 p.m., Nat. Sci. Transcendental Meditation Program - Free Public Lecture, 8 p.m., 528 W. Liberty. Linguistics - Richard Rhodes, "Snow," 4 p.m., 3050 Frieze. Oral Biology - Henry Trowbridge, title to be announced, 4 p.m., 1033 Kellogg. Student Wood and Crafts Shop - Power Tools Safety, 6 p.m., 537 SAB. Museum of Art - Christa Janecke, Art Break, "The Nude," 12:10 p.m. CRLT - TA Workshop, "Managing Stress," 4 and 7 p.m., registration required. Meetings Science Fiction Club - "Stilyagi Air Corps," 8:15 p.m., Michigan Union, ground floor conf. room. Academic Alcoholics -1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Michigan Gay Undergraduates -9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Tae Kwon Do Club -6 p.m., Martial Arts Room, CCRB. Center for Western Development Studies - Foreign Study Orientation, "Spring Program in Paris, France," 7p.m., 13 Angell Hall. Nurses' Christian Fellowship -4 p.m., 2703 Firstenberg. School of Education - Students for Participatory Governance, 7 p.m., 2231 SAB. Miscellaneous People's Produce Co-op, et al - The Empty Breadbasket, slide show, 8 p.m., 211 E. Ann. UAC-Minicourse registration, Michigan Union Ticket Office. SOS Community Crisis Center - Interviews for volunteer crisis coun- selors, for more info call 485-3222. WCBN - "Radio Free Lawyer," 6p.m., 88.3. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. Media services to be reviewed (Continued from Page 1) mittee asked was 'Can Michigan Media take a $250,000 cut in its budget?' But I don't even know what the question will be this time," he said. THE REVIEW will be divided into two phases, according to Frye. The first committee will gather information on the various media services, while the second committee will evaluate the fin- dings of the first and make a recom= mendation to the University's executive officers, he said. The fact-finding committee was created in order to determine exactly what media services are available at the University, Holbrook said. "Right now the review is specific only in procedure, but not in scope. This is because a catalog of (media) activities doesn't exist now," he said. ALTHOUGH COMMITTEE mem- bers will not be named for about a week, Frye said the fact-finding com- mittee will be made up of only Univer- sity administrators. "This way it will be handled more efficiently," Holbrook said. The review committee will consist of students and faculty members as well as administrators, Frye added. No specific date has been set for completion of the review but Holbrook said he hopes the process will be swift. "The hopes and expectation are that the time frame will be substantially shorter than in the case of the coun- seling review," he said. The University's counseling services have been under review for almost a year and no final recommendation has been made yet. If the fact-finding committee takes too long, it will slow down the whole process, Holbrook said. "If it's April or May before the first committee reports its findings, we might as well wait until fall to begin the review," he said. "It's real hard to get anything done over.the summer." [2 INDVIAv.L lTHEATRES $1.75 WEDNESDAY SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 p.m. "A MUST SEE"-Lindsay Beaver, Ann Arbor .. :%. (PGI THURS-5:50, 7:40, 9:30 WED-12:20, 2:10, 4, 5:50, 7:40, 9:30 SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS Tamarack Interviews Friday, Feb. 4 at Career Planning and Placement call for appointment - 764-7456 Sophles MERYL STREEP Choice KEVIN KLINE Classifieds get Results!. I THURS-6:45, 9:40 WED-1:00, 3:50, 6:45, 9:40 I You'll find a wide assortment of: " CLOTHING " HOUSEWARES " TOYS " DRAPES " ANTIQUES " SHOES * HARDWARE " BOOKS " FURNITURE " JEWELRY * PLUS A SNACK BAR SALE HOURS I I ASHLEY a Thursday 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Friday 12:00 noon -8:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m.-2:00 D.m. Z_ 0 PARKING Z 0 C7, Z: J -FIRST 11 In 1