Page 12 - The Michigan Daily- Friday, September 7, 1984 YOU'RE ALL CHECKED. IN. NOW CHECK USOUT Li nens n things SAVE 20-40% L TOWELS Q TUB MATS L SHEETS & PILLOWCASES- INCLUDING EXTRA-LONG TWIN FITTED Li COMFORTER SHAM DUST RUFFLE LTOSS PILLOWS L BEDREST Li BLANKETS i PILLOW PROTECTORS Li QUILTED MATTRESS PAD- INCLUDING EXTRA-LONG TWIN FITTED Li BEDSPREAD Li THROW RUGS Li HANGERS Li PICTURES Li LAUNDRY BAG Li SHOE STACK & SHOE BAG Li PORTABLE CLOTHES DRYER Li HOOKS L CLIP-ON LIGHTS Q SOAP BOX L TOOTHBRUSH TUBE Li SHOWER CURTAIN Li VINYL MATTRESS COVER- INCLUDING EXTRA-LONG TWIN 'U' counseling services vital By MARLA GOLD The University should not cut its counseling services' budgets further and needs to continuously review its programs, according to a University report. The main reason for the review of the counseling services was to see if the $6 million budget "was going where it was needed," said Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson. "AT THIS TIME, no conclusive answers have been drawn," said John- son. The review was prepared for John- son, the vice president in charge of counseling services, and Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye in charge of the University's general fund budget. The task force, which spent two years reviewing 63 counseling services, has recommended that the University not implement any more budget cuts to counseling and that a committee con- tinuously review the equality of their services. The task force, made up of students, professors, and directors of various counseling services, concluded that some services may need more money to serve the number of students that come in for help. DR. GERALD Marsden, director for the Counseling Center on Huron Street and co-chairman of the task force, said "there aren't enough resources to go around" since the budget cuts. The budget cuts are part of a five- year plan to reallocate $20 million dollar's within the University's general fund budget to store up "high priority" areas. According to the study, less than 10 percent of counseling funding is chan- neled into areas toward helpingstuden- ts with severe problems. ONE SUCH service is 76-GUIDE, a crisis line, which was forced to cut its 24-hour service back to 5 p.m. to 10 a.m. in 1981, and shuts down completely in the summer. Marsden said that the psychology clinic in the Counseling Service is a "last chance" - helping people with severe emotional problems. He said that his office occasionally has to shut the doors on people who need help because the staff is overbooked and there is no time to schedule more patients. "It is clear that there are people with severe problems that need help that aren't getting it," he said. BUT NOT everyone agrees that the money for severely disabled students is inadequate. Johnson said that if the allocations were different than the report showed, "I'd be scared." He said that most students who come to the University do not normally need extensive help, so the small percentage of funds given to areas in which more highly trained conselors requiring higher pay are needed is adequate. THE SECOND recommendation of the task force, to have an ongoing committee to review all counseling programs, is a first step toward assessing the quality of services. students receive-something not analyzed in the review. "We need to watch between what is needed and what is there," Marsden said. Dr. Charles Judge, Director of Academic Services in LSA said that in academic counseling, the demand out- weighs the availability of services, especially during class registration. He Free program already By THOMAS HRACH waiting lists." Despite the myriad of counseling ser- THE PROFESSIONAL Counseli vices available at the University and in Services staff primarily handl' the city, those that do not charge a fee serious emergencies, while simpl are plagued by too many patients and cases, such as depression, are usual not enough volunteers. turned over to the volunteers Part of the recent rise in counseling GUIDE, a free consultation servic can be attributed to the state's mental manned by students. institutions, said Weicher van Houten, The 76-GUIDE phone number director of the University's outpatient widely publicized as a counseling se psychiatry clinic. vice for students, but a lack of volu "PERHAPS today people are more teers forced the service to close for ti willing to discuss their problems," he summer. Callers are greeted by said, "but there is also a tendency to recording referring them to other me move people out of state hospitals, too tal health services. quickly. Many of the patients shouldn't While free services are availablet be out on the streets." students seeking immediate care, ver The patient load has also increased at little free help is available beyond t facilities designed for students with initial consultation. mental and emotional problems. "OUR SERVICE is only the fro During the busiest periods-the late fall line," said Zaid. "It's our job to help tb and early winter-the psychological students get to those that can he counseling service in the Union cannot them. Counseling Services refe keep up with its caseload.. students with serious problems such a "During our busy times of the year," drug abuse or suicidal tendenciest said clinical social worker Joan Zaid of professional services for which stude Counseling Services, "we take all the ts must foot the bill. patients initially but on return visits The University's Counseling Centi we're forced to put less serious cases on on Huron Street offers a free cor ng es er ly at ice is r- in- :he a !n- to pry he nt he .p rs as to sn- :er on- also attributes the problem to the. budget cuts throughout the University';- not only in counseling services. "With less money all over, more. probems fall on us," he said. One example is that classes close faster with fewer faculty members teaching, so students now go td academic counseling with this problem. "A fair amount of that could be streamlined," perhaps using a com-3.: puter system to tell a student if, for example, their distribution requirements have been met, Marsden said. Then, more money could be char neled into counseling for students whg: need it more, he said. This story originally appeared in'<: the Daily's summer edition. rierloaded [,.- sultation and then charges an hourly. fee for testing and treatment b graduate clinical psychology students. "WE CAN fix a person's medical problems, but then we must decide if its safe for them to go home. Many times'- we're forced to send a patient to othe, clinics," said social worker Jai Callahan of Health Services. Several professional off-campus ser- vices are also available for a fee, but many students who seek psychiatricZr. help often need little more than t sympathetic ear offered by volunteers.: But volunteers are sometimes'hard W: find, so the SOS Community Crisis Cen,-: ter in Ypsilanti holds three volunteef recruiting drives each year. Volunteers at SOS must undergo 65 hours of training before working the phones. "We look for caring, non' judgemental attitudes in our volun- teers," said SOS Director Maureen Wilkes. "Basically we look for open- minded people who want to help." This story originally appeared iii the Daily's summer edition. x Motor City stuntman sets stadium record 'A By CHARLIE SEWELL Ninety-six hours and twelve minutes after he began, Jim Purol sat in the last of 101,701 seats in the Michigan Football Stadium in June. "Monotony was the most difficult thing about it," said Purol shortly after completing the stunt. The sitting marathon raised nearly $3,500 for the American Lung Association, according to Purol's press agent. Purol has now performed a total of 10 stunts to benefit a variety of charities. IN HIS four days in the stadium, Purol slept only five and a half hours. During the day he had to be coated with suntan lotion and sprayed with water periodically. Despite the lack of sleep and a little stiffness in his legs and shoulders, Purol said he felt good. To help him perform the stunt he stuffed a pad into the seat of his pants and used specially designed hand-held tools to protect his hands from blistering as he moved along the stadium benches. "I've been working out for about eight months. I (haven't got the biggest arms, but I had enough to make it," he said. As he drove out of the stadium parking lot at 2:45 p.m., Purol was on his way to a 4 p.m. appearance on television'sn"Good Afternoon Detroit". "I'm running on adrenalin right now," he said. "Tonight I'll sleep." But Purol has little time for rest. He performs a nightly comedy musical act at a Detroit nightclub where he is known as Jim Mouth, a name he earned by performing such feats as smoking 140 cigarettes for five minutes and puf- Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Jim "Mouth Purol takes a seat in Michigan Stadium in June during his attempt to sit in all of the 101,701 seats. fing on 40 cigars for a similar period of time. Mouth hopes the Guiness Book of World Records will publish his newest record and create a new category he calls "stadium sitting." Presently he holds five Guiness records and five un- published records which the publishers of the record book say are too ridiculous to be published. Mouth cited several unusual records which do appear in the book, making the publishers' use of the term. ridiculous seem contradictory. "I told (the publishers) I was the self- proclaimed world's record holder of the most world records and they told met, couldn't do that. Who do they think they are?" Purol joked during his marathon. I This story originally appeared in the Daily's summer edition.. M { $ ry # Lots of Usable Reusables 450. 72 C U' bureaucracy runs own numbers racket a roe By THOMAS HRACH Contrary to the popular campus belief, the tenth digit on the familiar yellow student identification card is not just another random bit of bureaucracy. As every post-orientation freshperson knows, the student's social security number makes up the first nine digits of the ID number. BUT THE MYSTERIOUS tenth num- ber comes from a complex mathematical formula derived from the social security number. This "check digit" is derived from a series of multiplications, summations PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT - NIGHTS and finally one division whose remain der becomes the magic number. "The check digit determines if the student number is correct at the time of entry into any computer system," said Associate Registrar Harris Olsen. "It helps prevent errors, and is a common practice in many different industries." AS AN OPERATOR enters a student number into one of the many computer terminals on campus which thrive on students' personal records, the corn- puter applies the mathematical for- mula to the first nine digits. If the com- puter and the terminal operator disagree about what the tenth digit should be, the computer sounds a war- ning which is designed to prevent mistakes in academic, financial, and, personal records. Yet the shroud of ignorance still - covers the misunderstood tenth digit. Most students never consider the final digit's purpose or assume its existence I MASTERCARD 0 BANKAMERICARD/VISA I ~in