L~ CAL IYrA~rL The Michigan Daily - Wednesday. March 22, 1995 - 3 Music therapy treats disorders University patients are finding Mozart is more than a great musician - he can be therapeutic. Therapists at University Hospi- *als use music therapy as a tool to treat psychiatric disorders. Music calms patients and helps them express their feelings and creativity. "I believe we all have parts of ourselves that are kept tightly behind locked doors inside of us," Roberta Wigle, a University Hospitals music therapist, said in a statement. "We sometimes have trouble connecting with that part of our intimate selves. kut I believe music has the ability to slip under that door and reach into the room." University Hospitals has a desig- nated music therapy program only in the psychiatric units, but music therapy also has been used in pediat- ric physical rehabilitation; cancer therapy; transplant and gastrointesti- *[al units; the chronic pain clinic; and e neonatal intensive care unit. MLink, Library of Michigan collaborate on Internet training The University's MLink project and the Library of Michigan have *ntered into an agreement to work together on Internet training. More than 175 public libraries will receive some level of access to the Internet, and training centers will open in seven sites throughout Michigan this year. Along with Michigan's public li- braries, the collaboration will pro- vide hands-on training and materials to be used by all Michigan libraries. they also will explore development of interactive, technology-based methods for delivering training to the library community. The Library of Michigan an- nounced the funding of seven Internet Training Centers in 1994. The eight public library cooperatives receiving funding to develop these centers also will be a part of the effort. Mearborn campus receives grant The University's Dearborn cam- pus is receiving a $450,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to support the renovation of mechanical engineering labs. The grant will allow the School of Engineering to expand research and caching on combustion engines, alter- native fuels and lightweight materials. Current laboratories at the Dearborn's Engineering Laboratory Building have not been significantly renovated since 1959. The renovation plans call for cli- mate control in the engines and mate- rials laboratories, and a new gas de- tection system. Renovations will begin later this sear and are expected to be finished by September 1996. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Matthew Smart Advisory comm. outlines effects of health care on ' -- ®- - f By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter After examining health care ser- vices at the University, a health af- fairs advisory committee report rec- ommends changes in the administra- tive structure to meet on-going de- mands of national health care. The committee report's purpose is to educate faculty members about re- cent changes in national health care and their impact on the University Medical Center and its programs. The Senate Assembly com- missioned the re- port as part of its continuing discus- sion on health care concerns. "The report, at this point, is to generate faculty discussion," said committee mem- ber Monroe W. Keyserling. "It is not yet the inten- tion to draw any conclusions, but we realize they are issues that "How do continue to society w3 - a do andstiE peteinaI{ care systa focused 01 managed c --Mari Health aged care, 40 percent of the budget - which consists of medical service plans and fees paid by patients - may be greatly affected. This places financial risk on the University. Additionally, the academic mis- sions of the schools are at risk be- cause investigators rely on Medical Service Plans for their funding. "Thus, research, including that in collaboration among the health schools in the University, can be di- minished if medical care dollars be- come squeezed," we the report states. "Many will suf- 0 (what? fer if money is less and patients ins US tO are fewer." The third area ri corn affected will be IW Ot the medical care given to the fac- 101 ulty; M-care now covers about two-thirds of the University fac- are? ulty and staff. ilyn Rosenthal "If M-Care, Affairs adviser an organization of the University, cannot survive intense economic competition, then some other health delivery program must be sought," the report states. In order to address the challenges placed on University health care, the committee is evaluating whether the current administrative structure as it relates to the hospitals, Medical School and all health schools, is the most effective arrangement. A "dual system" currently gov- erns the Medical School. In academic affairs, the Medical School is respon- sible to the provost. However, in medi- cal affairs, the school reports to the vice provost for health affairs. The committee proposed either to have a leader that "bridges the Medi- cal School and the hospitals" or who "could oversee all health schools," the report states. "The health advisory committee focused on the administrative struc- ture of the University with regard to the Medical Center. We have not come to any conclusions about what the administrative structure should be," said committee chair James Sisson. "Our question is if the current structure is the optimum for meeting challenges of the future," he said. . 2 , w, ..>: y :. ___,:. o .v..... - - '' '': -'4 need to be discussed." One primary concern of the report is the growth in managed care in aca- demic medical centers. "Managed care is spreading quickly and we have to understand what it is and the challenges it poses for an academic medical center," said committee mem- ber Marilyn Rosenthal. In capitation, health care provid- ers take on the insurance risk through pre-paid HMOs, rather than fee-for- service, where insurance- companies take the risk. Patients are inclined to move toward managed care because it is often cheaper and more efficient. "(The Medical Center) also places a high emphasis on research and edu- cation. Our care tends to be expen- sive. We have special pressures on us," Rosenthal sai'd. "How do we con- tinue to do those things that society wants us to do and still compete in a health care system focused on man- aged care?" Capitation will move from com- prising about 5 percent of the current medical care in Michigan to about 50 percent or more within the next few years, the report states. As patients move toward man- 2 men electrocuted Consumer Power Co. linemen secure a power line in Adrian as police and construction workers gather around the scaffold where the two men died yesterday after apparently pushing a 35-foot high scaffold into the power line. Under rounId " Jan&e9arties are ' it"rlall the -rave' in etrot Lake Superior State students greet spng, burn snowman SAULT STE. MARIE (AP) - paper - is based on the Rose Sunday Get out your sunglasses, rub on some sunscreen and put on your bathing suit. It's time to burn the snowman. Lake Superior State University planned to greet the first full day of spring yesterday with its traditional rite of burning a fake snowman. The torching of the snowman - made mostly of straw with a veneer of Festival in Weinheim-on-the- Bergstrasse, Germany, where the mayor burns a snowman in effigy each year. Lake Superior students and area residents were invited to take part in the ceremony, which also includes poetry readings. The school has been holding the ceremony for 25 years. The Associated Press On weekend nights, they gather in Detroit and other midwestern cities, assembling in abandoned buildings and warehouses to dance until dawn to bone- rattling, futuristic "Techno" music. It's all the rave, a subculture with a self-proclaimed ethic of "Peace, Love, Unity and Respect." The rave movement is years old with roots in London, but it has man- aged to remain mostly underground in the United States. Its subterranean na- ture makes it almost impossible to track its spread across the country, but raves are now common in parts of the Mid- west, including Detroit. 'U' oficially reCognizes mentorship program From Staff Reports The University Mentorship Pro- gram has been officially promoted from a pilot project to a formally recognized program, the program's director, Penni Reed, said Monday. The program serves to provide a buddy system for first-year students by placing them in groups of four with one upperclass peer mentor and one faculty mentor. The groups are primarily assembled according to aca- demic interests. Participants met Monday with University President James J. Duderstadt at the program's "Meet the President" event, held in the Mu- seum of Art. After an introduction and several brief remarks, Duderstadt mingled with mentors and mentees. Also present to meet with students were Maureen A. Hartford, vice presi- dent for Students Affairs; Susan Lipshutz, associate provost; and Lester Monts, vice provost for aca- demic and multicultural affairs. The program, which also gave groups an opportunity to meet, began at 5 p.m. Join the Daily confer. Type confer mich-daily at the confer% prompt. Music defines the rave culture. and it is bone-jarringly loud and fast - up to 180 beats per minute. Some ravers are dubbed "bass-heads" be- cause they dance next to the 10-foot stereo speakers in the darkness to feel. their entire bodies pulse and vibrate. "The quickness of the beats, the futuristic electronics and historic sam- pling creates a blend that just makes you want to dance." said John Ore. 25. of Atlanta. "When you feel that music wash over you, it is that powerful." Ravers are typically college stu- dents and young professionals. They use e-mail and the Internet to spread news about their parties. A' wear a suit, carry a pager and ohen use phrases like level-set' and 'learnine curve."' Ore said. "I als- hav e my septum and my nav el pierced. a few tattoos and a pet ferret.. The underground culture madce headlines last month when four young people, including two 16-year-olds, died in a fiery wreck as they returned. to Lexington, Ky., from an all-night" rave in New Albany. Ind., just across the Ohio River from Louisville. Kentucky State Police still are in- v esti-ating, but ravers across the coun- try say it's common for participants to dance all night and then try to drive home. What's happening in Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS Q AISEC Michigan, general member meeting, 662-1690, Business Ad- ministration Building, Room 1276, 6 p.m. Q Coming Out Group for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People, 763-4186, Michigan Union, LGBPO Lounge, 7- 9 p.m. Q Discussion Group for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People, 763-4186, Michigan Union, LGBPO Lounge, 5:15-7 p.m. Q Hindu Students Council, weekly meeting, 764-0604, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 8 p.m. Q La Voz Mexicana, weekly meeting, 995-1699, Michigan League, Room C, 8 p.m.. Q Overeaters Anonymous, 769-4958, Michigan Union, Room 3200,12:10-1 p.m. U Rainforest Action Movement, Dana Building, Room 1040, 7:30 p.m. Q Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, men and women, beginners welcome, 994- 3620, CCRB, Room 2275, 8:30- 9:30 p.m. Q Taekwondo Club, beginners and other new members welcome, 747- 6889, CCRB, Room 2275, 7-8:30 p.m. League, Hussey Room, 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Q "Dating Violenceand Acquaintance Rape," sponsored by SAPAC and Project CAUSE, EECS, Room 1001, 12:30-2:30 p.m. Q "Education Job Search," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Student Activities Building, Room 3200, 5:10-6:30 p.m. Q "Internship and Summer Job Search," sponsoredbyCP&P, SAB, Room 3200. 5:10-6 p.m. Q "Join Us in Planning a March to Protest The Contract With America," sponsored by Coalition Against the Contract "On" America, Hutchins Hall, 7 p.m. Q "Katie Costner Story," lecture and facilitated discussion, sponsored by SAPAC and Project CAUSE, North Campus Commons, The Boulevard Room, 7 p.m. Q "Madame Reference," sponsored by School of Information and Li- brary Studies, Michigan Union, Room 1209, 7 p.m. Q "Midlife Women and Psychological Well-Being," sponsored by The Michigan Initiative for Women's Health, Rackham Building, East sponsored by Hillel, School of Edu- cation Building, Room 1202, 7:30 p.m. Q "The Question of Rescue: Seeking Comfort from the Holocaust," 16th Annual Conference on the Holo- caust, sponsored by Hillel, Hillel Building, 12 noon Q "The Social-Psychological Conse- quences of the Transition to De- mocracy in Eastern Europe," brown bag lecture, sponsored by CREES, Lane Hall Commons Room, 12noon Q "The U.S. Job Search For Interna- tional Students," sponsored by International Center, International Center, 5:10 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES Q 76-GUIDE, 764-8433, peer coun- seling phone line, 7 p.m.-8 a.m. Q Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info 76-EVENT or UM*Events on GOpherBLUE Q North Campus Information Center, North Campus Commons, 763- NCIC, 7:30 a.m.-5:50 p.m. Q Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley Lobby, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. I :5554 I "Tg1'qCr1 TSP1TI 1 P C C