Students offer dental services The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 1, 1988 - Page 5 Class offers BY MARLENE CHENG The dentist. For many people, the word conjures up thoughts of sharp metal instruments, Muzak, and drilling. While not a perfect substitute for the reliable family dentist - however painful that thought may be - students can find affordable and dependable dental care only minutes away at the University's School of Dentistry. The School of Dentistry has been offering a full range of dental services to students as well as non-students since it first opened in 1875. Although advertising is scant, over 14,000 people are treated annually for services rang- ing from dental checkups to oral surgery. At the clinic, first and second year dental students take care of simpler treatments, such as teeth cleaning, while third and fourth year students treat patients with more complex problems. Masters degree clinical students, studying to be specialists, perform work in their specialty field. The most complex problems are taken care of in the faculty clinic, where treatment is comparable to a pri- vate practice. Although all services are su- pervised by faculty members, some students are still hesitant to visit the dental school because they fear an inexperienced student may make a slip up. "I would go to the clinic only if I had a problem which couldn't wait," said first-year LSA student Jocelyn Carlin. "Otherwise, I'd wait to go home." "Occasional mistakes can occur during treatment," said Dr. Daniel Snyder, interim assistant dean for Clinical Affairs. "However, they are immediately addressed and taken care of." "The frequency of any mistake happening here is not greater than the frequency of an occurrence in private practice," added Dr. Frederick More, associate dean of the dental school. "The quality of service here is comparable to pri- vate practice. The only difference is that service here is slower, be- cause the students aren't as experienced." Of the students who visit the clinic, many come because the prices are substantially lower than those charged by private dentists. Teeth cleanings, for example, cost $21. Most insurance plans are also accepted at the clinic. In addition to dental services, the clinic sponsors two annual community projects. The first, which took place earlier this fall, is a mouthguard clinic where ath- letic mouthguards are custom- made free of charge. The other project is a Dental Health Day, which takes place in the spring. On this day, free dental examina- tions, blood pressure screenings, and oral cancer screenings are pro- vided. Despite the high quality of ser- vice given at the clinic, improve- ments are still being made to make patient care more efficient, More said. A computerized man- agement system is being devel- oped which will improve the effi- ciency of financial transactions and enable patient and student progress to be monitored. 1 0 advic4 health BY LAURA COHN So you've finally decided to be- come a doctor. You may have made this decision after suffering through a semester of organic chemistry, or you may have known all along. You've made your ultimate career decision. Not quite; you need an area of specialization. The choices, however, are quite numerous. Medical fields span everything from nursing to neurology. Your could be a surgeon or a hospital administrator; a phar- macist or an opthamologist or any number of things in between. The University offers a solution. The course "Perspectives on Careers in Medicine, Dentistry, and the Al- lied Health Profession" provides in- sight for the bewildered student interested in the health professions. Fran Zorn, an LSA counselor and lecturer with the Comprehensive Studies Program and the Residential College, started the course about 14 years ago to help students. She says that she was aware of the number of students who were interested in pre- med, but were "confused." She brings in speakers weekly to her home to familiarize her 25 stu- dents with areas within the health professions. "The main focus," Zorn said, "is to confirm which area in the health profession the students want to choose." "I often joke that this course should be called 'stereotypes smashed' because it gives the stu- dents a whole new perspecitve on the areas covered." The speakers come from diverse economic and ethnic baclgrounds. Jose Valdez, a Hispanic University alumnus, spoke to the class about his missionary work in the Philip- pines. Valdez now works as a physi- on jobs cian's assistant at Harper Grace Hos- pital in the Detroit area. "This class is about 60 percent minority students. I think it's important for me to provide them with role models. That's why I ask back minority students who attended Michigan and are now in professional schools or practicing," Zorn said. The key part of the 4-credit course according to Zorn is the self-invei- tory in which students examine their values, personal skills, interests, and conceptions of specific health professions. The students redo the self-inventories regularly as they learn more about specific areas and their feelings change. Zorn feels that this enables them to understand where they stand rela- tive to their c-reer choices. The stu- dents themselves seem to agree. "I feel that it (the self-inventory) gives me a chance to look at myself and my values in a way that I never would have on my own. It gives me a different perspective on the health professions," said Scott Sanders, an LSA sophomore in the course. The students must also complete a special project investigating an area of medicine that they haven't consid- ered previously. They then write an evaluation of themselves in that pro- fession. Susan Mancarei, a pre-pharmacy junior, is enjoying Zorn's class. "I think that it's probably the best class I've ever taken. I've always known I was a science-oriented person, and the medical field is so exciting to hear about." "(Zorn) makes you think about professions and considerations you otherwise might not have thought about. For example, the other day we were asked about the geographic area where we'd work. I'd never even considered that," Mancari said. Dental senior Lisa Tartagli ing at the School of Dent mother, Florence, of Okem In addition, More said, Greater emphasis is being placed on pa- tient care at the school. As evi- dence, a comprehensive care pro- gram is being developed in which patients with several needs will be treated by only one student, in- stead of several - similar to pri- vate dentists who address all of JOHN MUNSON/Dally one prepares a tooth for crown- istry clinic. In the chair is her nos. their patients' dental ailments. Also, a recall clinic, which will periodically remind patients to come in for examinations, is ex- pected to be adopted school-wide. The clinic, located in the den- tistry building, is open daily from 9 a.m. to noon, and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Police Notes Break-ins Ann Arbor police said they are investigating four weekend burglaries in the campus area, but no arrests have been made in connection with any of the incidents. Tools valued at $600 were stolen from a residence in the 300 block of North Thayer St. Saturday, Sgt. Jan Suomala said. He said the thieves gained entry into the residence by prying open a door. A $350 videocassette recorder was stolen from a residence'in the 1100 block of Maiden Lane Ct. Sunday, Suomala said. Suomala said $300 in miscellaneous items were stolen from a home in the 300 block of South Division St. Entry was gained through an unlocked door, he said. Thieves apparently entered a residence in the 800 block of Oxford Rd. through a window Sunday, Suomala said, but nothing was known to have been taken. -By Nathan Smith Hair Styling with a Flair - 7 Barber Stylists for MEN & WOMEN - NO WAITING!!! DASCOLA STYLISTS Opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 'Paper Chase' actor Houseman dies at 86 MALIBU, Calif (AP) - John Houseman, the producer who terrified millions with the "War of the Worlds" and won an Oscar for intimidating his students as the imperious law professor in "The Paper Chase," died yesterday. He was 86. Houseman died at his seaside home before dawn, said Ivan Goff, a family friend and scriptwriter. Margo Harley, a longtime friend and colleague, said he had spinal cancer. Houseman brought a magnetic eloquence to the role of Professor Charles Kingsfield in "The Paper Chase," which he first played in the 1973 film and then in the television series. Sexism workshop JOHN MUNSON/Daily Kata Issari, a counselor at the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, reads from a list of facets of society which are individually sexist, at a workshop on sexism at the Michigan League yesterday. The audience broke up into small discussion groups to com- plete the lists. Calif. may lower car premiums SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - In this state infatuated with cars but infuriated by soaring auto premiums, the insurance industry has raised a record $42.6 million for a campaign to defeat consumer-backed ballot pro- posals that would slash rates by at least 20 percent. The contest over five conflicting auto insurance rerform measures on Nov. 8 ballots has grown into the most expensive political struggle ever waged outside a political con- test. All told, a combined $60 million has been poured into a political war pitting consumer advocates, insurers and trial lawyers against one another. Industry analysts express fears that support for the tougher rate-cutting measures could spawn a nationwide "insurance revolt." More immediately, if Californians- approve more than one of the five conflicting measures, it could likely trigger court battles that would pro- duce unexpected hybrids. But polls show Californians lead- ing toward approval of Proposition 103, the deepest and broadest of the measures on the ballot. Proposition 103, supported by consumer advocate Ralph Nader, would lower almost all rates by an immediate 20 percent below Nov- ember 1987 rates. It would require an additional 20 percent cut in insurance rates for good drivers. It would also give an elected in- surance commissioner control over future rate increases, limit use of ter- ritorial rating to set auto insurance premiums, and subject the industry to state antitrust and unfair business practice laws. The rush to reform auto insurance was spurred by rates which have risen 40 percent between mid-1985 and the end of 1987, according to legislative studies. Harvard Business School Looking Ahead to the MBA The Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration seeks top graduates with a career interest in general management. An Admissions Officer will be on campus NOVEMBER 3, 1988 to speak with students about work experience and the two-year MBA Program. For more details and to sign up for an information cPC'C'i flfl r t ffl . n,.4 I SZE-CHUAN WEST Specializing in Sze-chuan, Hunan, and Mandarine cuisine DINING-COCKTAILS-CARRY-OUT M.,. a... .,.., Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Wednesday, Nov. 2-thru Friday, Nov. 4, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., I I