100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

May 27, 1981 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1981-05-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 27, 1981-Page 9
Italian govt. falls,
stoek priees tumble

From AP and UPI
ROME - Links to a secret Masonic
lodge, allegedly involved ina plot to set
up an authoritarian regime in Italy,
toppled Christian Democrat Premier
Arnaldo Forlani's coalition gover-
nment yesterday and sent stock prices
tumbling.
A list of 953 alleged Lodge P-2 mem-
bers, released last week, named many
prominent people, including three
Cabinet ministers, leading bankers,
powerful businessmen, top army and
police officials, and noted journalists.
Most denied membership.
FORLAN L WANTED to replace
the three ministers linked to the lodge
and hold together the coalition of
Christian Democrats, Socialists, Social
Democrats and Republicans. But
Socialist leader Bettino Craxi, who has
long sought the premiership, refused to
go along.
The Socialist Party immediately in-

dicated that it would push for a Socialist
premier, which, if successful, would
mean the end of 35 years of Christian
Democrat rule in Italy.
Communist Party chairman Enrico
Berlinguer attacked what he called the
corruptness of the outgoing gover-
nment and its inability to control in-
flation, and called again for his party to
be represented in the new cabinet.
"NOW, MORE than ever, we see that
it is necessary to have a democratic
alternative government," Berlinguer
said, using a phrase he has used in the
past to mean communist participation.
After a 45-minute cabinet meeting,
Forlanil submitted the resignation of
his seven-month-old government to
President Sandro Pertini, a Socialist,
who asked the premier to stay on in a
caretaker capacity.
Pertini called in two former presiden-
ts and the heads of the two houses of
See TOP, Page 11

I Academic high
A Volkswagen body was found perched mysteriously atop Loy Norrix High
School in Kalamazoo yesterday. The curious appearance of the car body has
reportedly perplexed the school administrators.
Medical scholarship
program jeopardized

(Continued from Page 1)
obligation, according to Noonan.
Greg McCullough, a medical student
in the NHSC project with another two
years of medical school ahead of him,
said he will choose a rural area over an
urban area and hopes to stay in his area
past his two-year obligation. "We get to
choose from among the different evils
they provide us," among which are
rural areas, Indian reservations, and
federal prisons.
UNDERLYING the Reagan ad-
ministration's decision to recommend
axing the NHSC project is the predic-
tion of a glut of doctors by the 1990s, ac-
cording to conclusions reached by two
research studies. One, published recen-
tly by the Rand Corp., showed over a 5
to 10-year period an increase in the
dispersal of. certified specialists in
smaller-sized communities.
The Reagan administration believes
the projected oversupply of doctors will
drive the surplus to deprived areas,
making it unnecessary for the gover-
nment to intervene in their geographic
distribution.
According to a University economist,
whether or not that happens will depend
on the kind of doctors who enter the
profession and how flexible they are

with respect to their specialties. "It
would depend on what makes doctors
choose their specialties in the first
place, and to what extent market
rewards play in that choice," he said.
Pamela Giring from the state Depar-
tment of Public Health in Lansing said
access to physicians may not be a
problem, but "even a surplus of doctors
won't solve the basic unattractiveness
of the areas."
EVEN WITH a surplus of doctors,
there may not be enough primary care
physicians (the type needed most in
rural and inner-city areas), but, accor-
ding to Eugene Carpenter, assistant in
research from the University's School
of Public Health, there will be "108 per-
cent of the need for family practioners,
meaning, near-balance."
Carpenter was uncertain as to
whether the Reagan administration is
correct in assuming that a market sur-
plus will naturally correct the
geographical imbalance of physicians.
"At this point, the evidence is mixed as
to whether the market will rectify
geographic distribution," he said, ad-
ding, however, that competition under
such a surplus would be keen enough
"to push more physicians into areas
they would not otherwise have gone."

NOW ?S ay i5 thr1'0
BEVERAGE
orTWO
m 2 RIBEYE
- STEAK
DIN NERS
7- * All-You-Can-Eat
Salad Bar-Baked Potato
*"Warm Roll with Butter
t .' PL US
- __'BEVERAGE WITH
FREE REFILLS
(except milk)
COUPON MUST * E COUPON MAST
PU ACCOMPANY PURCHASE -ACCOMPANY PURCHASE
* Save 2S69 e "
up to 2 69upto ;'.9
2 RIBEYE STEAK 2 RIBEYE STEAK
DINNERS...$5. DINNERS. $5.99
PLUS BEVERAGE ELPLUS BEVERAGE e
WITH FREE REFILLS (except milk ) WITH FREGE REFILLS(except milk)
imtone oupon prcoupl ervsit ano eused i Lmto"ecuonroupe pr isit antb sedi
cobnto* ihohrdsout.Apial ae o comn atin ittherdsountsApplcble ax o t u
nced. oe s tax , p, icabeto i~ regulr rce wer rqure ncluded.Soles taxappicaeto rlrpie wher requred
by low At ParticipatingSteakhouses. byl Participati"g teakhouses
Offer good May 10 UOfhr gdMay315
thru May 31M Ofergou May 31Ma 1
]0EECUT OUT THIS COUPON ...a...CUT OUT THIS COUPONEEUI
3354 East
Washtenaw Ave.
(Across from 3
Arborland Shopping Center) +
On West Stadium Blvd.
(Just North of Intersection 191PonderosaSystem,In.
of Stadium & Liberty)

If you're tired of very small rations
And need a place to bring your relations
Let the League be your diner
There's none other finer Lunch 11:30 to 1:15
At a price that helps beat inflation! Dinner 5:00 to 7:15
)"W. SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR
'w STUDENTS
. .TUSend your League Limerick to:
ThefVichigan MLManager. Michigan League
IL~vnua 227 South Ingalls
Next to Hill Auditorium You will receive 2 free dinner
Located in the heart of the campus. tickets if your limerick is used in
it is the heart of the campus ... one of our ads.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan