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February 10, 1989 - Image 16

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1989-02-10
Note:
This is a tabloid page

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76

Reach 40,000 readers after class,
advertise in
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A UNIQUE PROGRAM
University of Michigan Dearborn
Program in Health Policy Studies
(Formally Health and Society Program)
An undergraduate, interdisciplinary BA program
for students interested in the health professions:

71

-W

U

WEEKENU/DAVID LUBLINER
DJ Jerry Mack announces his "Yazoo City Callling" show,featuring old Dutch Blues at WCBN.
CBN will hold their benefit bash this Sunday night.
Weekend witnesses WCBN
bash for bucks at ballroom

* medical sociology
* health policy and planning
* medical ethics
* health care economics

* health care and the law
* information systems in
health care
* comparative health care

systems

...and more

By Mark Swartz
If anyone cares, radio history will
be made today.
No, nothing as stupid and ghoul-
ish as a broadcast of a trumped-up
attack from Mars. No hot-shot in a
Hawaiian shirt will explode a pile of
disco records to incite baseball fans
to riot. This is much better. At 3
p.m. today on 88.3 FM, Ann Ar-
bor's very own WCBN, afternoon
DJ Sue Dise will dye Chief An-
nouncer Kate Michaud's hair a fiery
red. On the air, right before your
ears, an actual hair-coloring will take
place.
A station like CBN deserves your
listening ear. A station like CBN
deserves your folding money.
This Sunday night at 8 p.m., the
Tenth Annual WCBN Fundraiser
Bash will fill up not one but two
stages in the Michigan Union Ball-
room. For five dollars, (or a pledge

of twenty or more at the door) stu-
dents, faculty, and any members of
the general public can gain admis-
sion to "one helluva party," while
supporting one great so-
cial/cultural/spiritual/musical opera-
tion.
"We need money to keep the sta-
tion going," said Brad Heavner, pro-
duction director and Bash coordina-
tor. The student-operated outfit re-
ceives only minimal support from
the University, so CBN relies heav-
ily on the Bash for repairing dilapi-
dated reel to reel players and head-
phones, and to expand an already ex-
pansive record library.
The commercial-free, round-the-
clock broadcast is "an integral part of
the Ann Arbor and University com-
munity," insisted Heavner, only half
serious. ("Make sure you use inte-
gral," he added.)
Moreover, "it's a relief from the

American-pop-idiot garbage-culture
that plays on all the other stations,"
Heavner said.
Michaud, the redhead-to-be, sees
the station as a "catalyst for people
not to fall into the trite commercial
quagmire." By playing an ever-in-
creasing range of musical styles
which range from metal to post-
classical to rockabilly to gospel,
CBN teaches while it entertains.
Best of all are the free-form shows
that run the airwaves in the wee
small hours of the morning. Only
CBN caters to consecutive requests
for Little Willie John, Randy Travis,
and the Bad Brains.
The Fundraiser Bash, said
Michaud, "is our way of thanJ.1g
the audience and their way of thank-
ing us." Eight acts will perform in
solidarity with CBN's cause. Like
the station's format, there's some-
See WCBN, Page 9
$1.00 OFF I

Dearborn
Continued from Page 18
in dress and conservative in philoso-
phy," said Scharfenberg.
For instance, last year Student'
Government faced opposition from
students when it wanted to install
condom vending machines in bath-
rooms. Students joke that their pro-
fessors are more liberal than they
are.
Dearborn was set up as a mosty
undergraduate, teaching institution
with "master teachers," said Medical
Sociology Prof Marilyn Rosenthal.
The classes are small - most
have 25 students or less - provid-
ing for interaction between profes-
sors and students. And the emphasis
is on teaching rather than research.
Dearborn is also unusual because
the campus is located on 250 acres
of the Henry Ford Estate. The origi-
nal Ford mansion, Fairlane, is lo-
cated on one side of campus, and be-
hind it are seventy acres of land -
including forests, an abandoned or-
chard, and a marsh - preserved as an
environmental study area.
While Dearborn is part of the
University system, it is run with "as
little interference as possible," said
Arden.
But while people on campus
want to be independent, but they
also want stronger links with Ann
Arbor.
"We're at a sufficient distance
from Ann Arbor that we would want
to have, and need to have, a lot of
local autonomy," Arden said.
"There's a desire to be autonomous.
There is also a wish, on this cam-
pus, for closer relations with Ann
Arbor."
As Dearborn grows, its role is
quickly changing from that of an
extension campus to that of a major
local university.
Of the 15 state colleges and uni-
versities in Michigan, Dearborn
ranked second only to Ann Arbor in
standards based on high school grade
point averages of incoming students.
The average first-year student at
Dearborn had a 3.4 grade point aver-
age in high school, a 23.6 ACT
score, and was in the top 12 percent
of their high school class.
"We feel the more Ann Arbor
people know about us, the more ac-
ceptance there could be. What sepa-
rates us is ignorance, not knowledge.
We would like to build bridges."
Arden said.
Arden added he would like to fa-
cilitate the flow of students and fac-
ulty members between the two cam-
puses, which are separated by only
45 miles.
Currently, Dearborn students in
liberal arts and engineering can sign
up to interview with firms who re-
cruit in Ann Arbor, but only if there
are spaces available.
Local companies are often at-
tracted to interview at Dearborn be-
cause students are "born and raised
here, and don't want to leave," said
Janet LaRose, director of Dearborn's

Office of Career Planning and
Placement.
She said Dearborn's work co-op
program is another reason why re-
cruiters chose to come to Dearborn.
Along with their education, students
get a good dose of realism.
"They've got excellent work ex-
perience, they're easily hired, they're
more sophisticated, and they're fa-
miliar with interviewing. They have
a lot of work savvy" she said.
But. LaRose said, Dearborn is
;ometimes bypassed when compa-
mies recruit in An Arbor.
"We still dont get the companies
o come here. They like to come to
one university campus, and they will
elect Ann Arbor over Flint and over
Dearborn."
Stue Baran is what they term a
"non-traditional student."
She is 26, married, and commutes
from Royal Oak. But the "non-
traditional" student is typical at
Dearborn.
"I moved out here four years ago,
and I wanted to go to a school with a
good name. I couldn't afford to go to
Ann Arbor. It's too far from me, and
I figured I would be working," Baran
said.
Baran, who works as a software
engineer in the co-op program, said
her job exposed her to the systems
and the people she'd be working
with when she graduates.
"The job gives you more experi-
ence. It's a lot easier to market what
you have. I think it impresses em-
ployers," she said.
Since many students are working
their way through school, the in-
creasing cost of tuition concerns
them. But tuition at Dearborn does
not differ greatly from Ann Arbor,
about $400 less for in-state first and
second year students.
Because its state funding base is
lower, Dearborn is hit harder by a
lack of funding, said Chancellor
Wilson. Dearborn receives only
$2,000 per full-year student, about
$600 less than the state average.
Funding permitting, students
would like to see several programs
expanded. The evening program only
offers selected areas in which the
University can guarantee completion
in the evening. Core classes are of-
fered at night, but some upper-level
classes are not offered consistently in
the evening, particularly in business
and engineering.
Students would also like to have
an official student union built to
house all club offices, study rooms,
and a game room. At present there is
a common lounge area in the Uni-
versity Mall, a building that also
houses classrooms and faculty of-
fices.
While there are more activities
and programs in Ann Arbor, Maria
Welborne, a fifth-year engineering
student who attended Ann Arbor for
a year and a half, said she feels the
quality of the Dearborn education
surpasses that of Ann Arbor.

"I really think Dearborn is a bet-
ter school,"she said. "The professors
in Ann Arbor have to produce re-
search in order to keep their jobs.
That's their primary job - not
teaching."
"They teach us theory as well as
applications. The classes seem to be
more in tune - at least with the
automotive industry - with what is
going on now. w .

\Sl- ,

kI

D A Y T ON3 H U I
If you enjoy change, I
risks, being creative
influencing others, you
being part of a ne
career selling opport
Hudson's is a fashion-forward department store
a commitment to providing superior customer servic
outstanding opportunity in our Ann Arbor store for f
people who like to set the pace.
We are initiating a SPECIAL SERVICE PROGRA
time Sales Consultants in our Women's Liz Claiborne
ment, Women's Update department and the Men's W
department with the earning potential of $18,000 or n
base plus bonus).
This opportunity calls for a self-motivated, drive
One who wants a sense of ownership to "their" busin
is self-confident, and fiercely supportive of the custo
portunity will allow you to go above and beyond for
We will invest in your development because we are i
your success.
If you enjoy selling and would like to be a part C
SPECIAL SERVICE PROGRAM we would like to tal
Please apply at our personnel office Monday through
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 12 noon. Resun
accepted through February 21, 1989.
DAYTON HUDSON.
DEPARTMENT STORE
COMPANY
Briarwood Mall
Ann Arbor Ml 48108
An Equal Opportunity Employer

2 Nona

I

For Exam Preparation
Choose to EXCEL!
" Learn to Anticipate the Exam
" Improve Your Test-Taking Skills
" Use Your Study Time More Effectively
" Achieve Your Maximum Potential Score

EXTPr

:rai r i

1,

i

For information call 593-5287
Interdisciplinary Studies Division
The University of Michigan
'ESCHOOL OF MUSIC

Sunday
February 12

Stearns 2+2+2 Lecture-
Samuel D. Quigley, from the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts, "Making Bronze
Gongs in Java."
Recital Hall, 2 p.m.
FREE

Dance Master Class-
Pearl Priums, foremost authority on
African dance, works with U-M
Dance students.
Studio A, Dance Building, 4-6 p.m.
Phone 763-5460 for reservations.
FREE
For up-to-date program information on School of Music events call the
24-Hour Music Hotline: 763-4726

BROADWAY
FRIED CHICKEN
AND BARBEQUE
1151 Broadway across from Kroger's
Ann Arbor
CHICKEN * SPARERIBS " FISH
HAMBURGERS * SANDWICHES
HOMEMADE DESSERTS * SALADS " HOAGIES
We deliver to ALL of Ann Arbor
CALL US - 761-8611

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--------- - ml

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PAGE 6 WEEKEND/FEBRUARY 10,1989

PAGE 6

WEEKEND/FEBRUARY 10, 1989

WEEKEND/FEBRUARY 10, 1989

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