y The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 20, 1980-Page 11 Pryor 'ver ill; s surgery postponed SHERMAN OAKS, Calif. (AP) - Critically burned comedian Richard Pryor was described as "very, very ill" and in "extreme pain" yesterday, and } doctors said they were disturbed by complications in his condition. "Richard pryor is in critical con- dition and very, very ill," Dr. Richard Grossman said. "I cannot overstress a the seriousness of Mr. Pryor's in- - juries." - ;YESTERDAY'S report was one of the most pessimistic since Pryor was ad- mitted to the Sherman Oaks Com- munity Hospital June 9 with third- - - 1degree burns over the upper half of his body. He was burned when his clothing caught fire at his home. Skin graft surgery, originally expec- ted to begin at the end of this week, was _ - rpostponed until Monday at the earliest, Grossman said. "When I saw Richard in the whirlpool this morning, I was not 100 per cent happy with the way the wounds looked at this stage and felt they were not ready to accept grafts," he said. Hospital spokeswoman Nona Egan said a variety of medical specialists had been called in for consultation on the 39-year-old entertainer's condition. AP Photo Volcanic fury The U.S. Geological Survey yesterday released photos taken from an airplane during the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. A glowing lava dome at the base of the volcano's crater has doubled in size since it was spotted four days ago. Scientists say it could be the birth of a new summit but added it could be blown apart by future eruptions. The dome formation stage often signals the end of volcanic activity as a mountain rebuilds itself. Danskins Regents OK T med center SALE (Continued from Page 1) H limited University President Harold Shapiro Ttme only assured Nederlander that work on just GARGOYLE FILMS B such a priority list is now under way. 330 S. State Shapiro brought the Regents up to ROOM 100 HUTCHINS HALL JUNE 20 inNickels date on state financing for the project, (LAW SCHOOL) 7:30 + 9:30 Ade saying Governor William Milliken has 761-6207 informally agreed to fund up to 79 per cent of the project, with a ceiling of $200 million on the state's portion of the project cost. An additional $35 million to $50 SECOND A million is expected from hospital revenues, and $20 million more is ex- pected in gifts, Shapiro said. That puts a B UL) K tentative limit of $255 million to $270 million on the project. d The remaining steps in the hospital replacement program are: preparation VANTAGE PO INT of schematics (expected to take ten months and cost $5 million); final state approval of the program; preparation onday, JUne 23 t of working drawings; acceptance of For more Information call 994-5350 bids and awarding of contracts; and, construction itself.---------------------, , .