0 Page 2- The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, October 4, 1989 'U' creates first geriatric research center by Diane Cook Daily Research Reporter The University Medical Center was awarded a five-year, $6.1 mil- lion grant this week from the National Institute on Aging to create the nation's first Geriatric Research 4nd Training Center. The center will unite 77 University researchers, who are prin- ciple investigators on grants totaling more than $20 million from the National Institute of Health and other federal agencies. The center will emphasize research and training of geriatricians in brain disorders, impaired mobility, and impaired homeostasis. The University was awarded the grant for the center after a competi- tive search by the NIA involving nine other institutions - including Harvard, Johns Hopkins and Case Western Reserve - an NIA spokesperson said. The aging insti- tute looked for strengths in the areas of scientific excellence and a suitable environment for training. "Today's serious shortage of geri- atric educators and researchers is hav- ing a negative influence on our soci- ety's ability to provide quality care for older Americans," said NIA Director Franklin Williams. "In funding this first Geriatric Research and Training Center, the NIA con- tinues its commitment to stimulate scientific leadership in aging research and to develop the teachers who will train future geriatricians." The NIA anticipates an inadequate number of geriatricians in the coun- try to handle the volume of elderly patients expected by the year 2000. The Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences esti- mates that the number of Americans older than 85 - now 2.7 million, which is 12 percent of the total pop- ulation - will double by the end of the century. By the year 2000, the use of short-term hospital care by older people will have risen 50 per- cent, and more than one million ad- ditional older people will be receiv- ing long-term health care. The program will work in con- junction with the Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Ann Arbor. Campaign ta by Christine Kloostra James McCrory spent a week on campus this summer and "came back with a new attitude about life." McCrory, a sophomore at Detroit's Pershing High School, took part in the Office of Minority Affairs' College Day program, designed to en- courage Black, Hispanic, and Native American students to pursue a college education. Participants in the program and their families composed an audience of more than 80 at the Chrysler Center last night as the Michigan Department of Education's Office of Minority Equity launched its "Higher Education Is Justified" media campaign. The campaign's goal is to motivate minority rgets minorit youth to complete a college education. Audiences at all 15 of Michigan's public uni- versities participated in the teleconference. Through an interactive hookup, audience mem- bers from around the state were able to phone in questions to the panelists at a television studio in Detroit. The highlight of the hour-long teleconference was the premiere of a video designed to motivate underrepresented youth to attend and complete college. The video, which will be distributed throughout the state, features several role models for minority youth, including Jaime Escalante, subject of the movie "Stand and Deliver," and Ben Carson, a University Medical School gradu- ate who is now Chief of Pediatric Neurosurgery youth at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Following the teleconference, a panel of University representatives from the pre-college programs sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs, the College of Engineering, and the Comprehensive Studies Program fielded ques- tions from the audience. Concerns voiced by au- dience members ranged from financing a college education to support services for minority stu- dents at the University. The media campaign, as well as the College Day program, was developed as a part of the King-Chavez-Parks Initiative, an effort by the state legislature to increase minority enrollment at Michigan's 15 public universities. V I PANAMA Continued from Page 1 fense Forces headquarters in down- town Panama City yesterday morn- ing. The rebels' claimed in a broadcast around noon that they had over- thrown Noriega and retired top offi- cers, but that communique was not repeated. Loyalist forces later an- nounced they were "ready to give their lives" in resistance. An officer loyal to Noriega later said the general was at an undis- closed location controlling the opera- tions against the insurgents. White House spokesperson Mar- lin Fitzwater said Tuesday afternoon in Washington that officials had heard "rumblings" of the uprising. He said later it appeared that Nor- iega's forces "are back in control. A communique by loyalists, read over Channel 2 television, said, "The nationalist officers of all ranks and in all the barracks countrywide have confirmed their loyalty to the fatherland... and to our Commander- in Chief Gen. Manual Antonio Nor- iega." "The few who allowed them- selves to fall prey to cowardice, to foreign money and to treason are a minority who advocated foreign in- tervention," the communique added. "In the next few hours, this group will appear before justice. Health & Fitness W WHAT'S j e HAPPENING RECREATIONAL SPORTS Outdoor Recreation Program WEEKEND CANOE TRIP FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13 - SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15 PRE-TRIP MEETING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1989 7:00PM - 8:00PM NORTH CAMPUS RECREATION BUILDING FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 764-3967 DRINK Continued from Page 1 "allows Residence Advisors and Residence Directors to be able to work toward a comfortable living environment for the people who live there." LSA senior Chris Yeh, a second- year RA, said the policy has worked effectively. "The policy makes it easier for us to enforce restrictions without being strict about it," he said. "At Markley, all the residents have to do is keep (alcohol) outof public areas," Yeh said. "If we don't see it in public, and it's not causing a problem in private, we're not go- ing to take it away." Yeh said if students are consum- ing alcohol and the door to the room is open, he will ask them to close it. For huge dorm room parties, "we give one or two warnings, and then if it gets bigger, we just break it up," he said. First-year LSA student Erica Stone, a South Quad resident, said TANNING SALON Welcome Back Special 6 sessions $18.00 w/act 227 E. Liberty 995-8600 Expires 10/16/89 her experiences with the policy have been favorable. The RAs "basically respect people's privacy, but (the policy) is effective when it needs to be," she said. RECYCLE Continued from Page 1 The Ann Arbor Ecology Center, in response to the suspension of the mandatory recycling ordinance, has begun circulating a petition which calls for the city to enact required re- cycling as soon as possible. Ruth Kraut, who works at the Ecology Center, said Ann Arbor has received a grant from the state to ini- tiate and help finance mandatory re- cycling and said the city should not put it off any longer. In conjunction with the recycling ordinance, the council passed a com- posting ordinance last month stating city garbage collectors will not pick up yard waste as of Oct. 15. This or- dinance&a come under heated debate in past weeks. Schleicher, who said the council rushed into a vote on the compost- ing ordinance, said Republicans are trying to make sure the same thing doesn't happen with recycling. A study is presently being con- ducted by R.W. Beck Inc. for the council which will report on the cost-effectiveness of mandatory recy- cling. Schleicher said the council should wait to get this information before the ordinance is put up to a vote again. But councilmember Liz Brater (D-Third Ward) said of the delay, "Every day we delay we are costing the taxpayers money." E9711 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Mexico and U.S. pledge trust WASHINGTON - Mexican President Carlos Salinas De Gortari and President Bush on Tuesday pledged mutual trust and understanding on cross-boundary issues, agreeing to conduct trade negotiations and to clean up Mexico City and Tijuana pollution. To mark Salinas' visit to Washington, the two governments signed seven agreements on trade, environment, investment, and tourism. The agreements, Bush said in praising the "closeness" of U.S.-Mexico ties, "are concrete examples of how our administrations have worked closely together during the last 10 months. They show what can and must be done to make relations between our two great nations even closer than they are today." Salinas also cheered for a close relationship, but said his primary goal in facilitating U.S. investment in Mexico was to "open up additional sources of employment in Mexico for Mexicans." Soviet legislature oposes Gorbachev on strike ban MOSCOW - President Mikhail S. Gorbachev suffered his first major policy defeat in the 4-month-old Soviet legislature yesterday when it rejected his call for an emergency ban on workers' newly won right to. strike. But Gorbachev told lawmakers he was satisfied with a compromise that imposes a selective ban in strikes in critical industries. He said it would "help restore a normal life." Gorbachev said Monday he wanted a ban on all strikes for the next 15 months to prevent anarchy from overwhelming the shaky Soviet economy. A wave of strikes, largely over ethnic and political conflicts, cost the country $6.5 billion in July and August alone., It was the first time the new Supreme Soviet legislature stood up to the government and opted for its own policy, though it had previously rejected several Cabinet nominees. E. Germany bans emigration PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia - East Germany issued an order yesterday banning free travel to Czechoslovakia but agreed that at least 10,000 of its citizens already in Prague could emigrate to the West. East German leader Erich Honecker accused West Germany of "insolently breaking promises" by letting the East Germans into its em- bassies in Prague and Warsaw. "They believe in West Germany that they can destabilize East Germany with a broad-based attack, but it will not work," he said in his first major speech since returning to work after a long convalescence from gall bladder surgery. ADN, the official East German news agency, carried his remarks. The crackdown on travel came after hundreds of East Germans stormed through police lines to get inside the embassy in Prague. They climbed facades, rooftops, and a fence to reach the crowded com- pound. Many were left blood-spattered by the police and some fell uncon- scious inside the grounds. Kemp plans to clean up HUD WASHINGTON - Housing Secretary Jack Kemp on Tuesday un- veiled a plan to clean up the Department of Housing and Urbin Development, including elimination of a program and a special fund he said were used to reward politically connected developers. "Many past funding decisions were, frankly, based on political influ- ence rather than merit," Kemp said in releasing his 58-point plan. "Under my stewardship, no decisions will be made at HUD for the political ad- vantage or personal gain of any one person or of a political party." Kemp, in his first news conference as secretary, also announced that HUD has barred from doing government business a mortgage lender whose defaults in a HID program total more than $700 million. Kemp praised the congressional investigation of influence peddling, fraud and mismanagement at HUD during the Reagan administration. EXTRAS Reps busted for Polyester LANSING - Police slapped handcuffs on a group of lawmakers yesterday before escorting them off the House floor and to the jail where they were each forced to raise about $300 in bail. Their crime: wearing polyester and failing to wear socks. The mock arrest was coordinated by WITL, a Lansing radio station, and state Rep. Nelson Saunders (D-Detroit) to raise money for the American Cancer Society. Allan Gibbs, WITL program director and self proclaimed "hanging judge," showed up as the session was ending wearing a judge's black robe and old fashioned gray wig. Gibbs said he had been ordered to arrest all House Republicans for "possession and distribution of polyester" and "socklessness on the House floor." The reference to socklessness applies to Rep. David Honingham, R- West Bloomfield, who says he only wears socks while competing in sports. 0$ 0 q J_____________ POWERHOUSE GYM GYMO., ANN ARBOR - Open 7 days a week - 6000 Sq. Ft. workout space - Streamline Equipment - Coeducational Facility - Showers, Whirlpool, Sauna - Personal Trainers The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 in-town and $39 out-of-town, for fall only $18.00 in-town and $22.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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Opinion Staff: Sharon Holand, David Levin, Fran Obeid, Greg Rowe, Kathryn Savoie. Sports Staff: Jamie Burgess, Steve Cohen, Theodore Cox, Andy Gottesman, David Hyman, Eric Lemont, Jay Moses, Jonathan Samnick, Ryan Schreiber, Jeff Sheran, Peter Zellen. Arts Stafl: Greg Baise, Sheala Durant, Brent Edwards, Mike Fischer, Michael Paul Rscher, Forrest Green, Brian Jarvinen, Ami Mehta, Kristn Palm, Annette Peirusso, Jay Pinka, Mark Shaiman, Peter Shapiro, Mark Webster. Photo Staff: Amy Feldman, Julie Holman, Jose Juarez, Jonathan Uss, Josh Moore, Bil Wood. Weekend Staff: Jim Poniewozik. r