Page 10-Thursday, June 18,.1981- Oklahoma convict misses execeutioni date -TheMichigan Daily 4 OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) - A state appellate judge said yesterday a con- demned double slayer whose execution wasn't stayed until two days after the date a lower court had ordered him to die was never in real danger of dying. "But we don't like for this sort of thing to happen," Tom Brett, presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals, said of the mixup. BRETT ISSUED a written order yesterday, staying a lower court's or- der which had set the execution of James William White, 24, Gentry, Ark., for Monday, June 15. White was found guilty on two counts of first degree murder for the pistol slaying of his former girlfriend and her newly wed husband near Colcord, Okla., in June, 1980. Brett blamed a combination of 7<', errors, including a computer discrepancy, for the chain of events. The state not only failed to execute White, but an automatic appeal required by law was never filed. Brett had issued an oral stay Tuesday night after United Press International had called to inquire about White's status. "There was little chance he would have been executed," Brett said. Doctors in Michigan: surplus or shortage? (Continued from Page 3 methodologies to determine need and future supply." THE PSC REPORT, Wicks said, "is very unclear as to how they justify the figures for need. It starts with the assumption that the.present supply is the appropriate and efficient one." OHMA, Wicks said, used an existing model of an efficient health care delivery system, the Health Main- tenance Organization as a basis for its study. The figures OHMA projects for 1990-a 35 to 45 percent surplus-are based upon changes to "an improved delivery system that's more efficient than the present one." The PSC report criticizes OHMA for a "16 percent error" in its figures for 1980 active physicians. OHMA includes a count of doctors licensed in Michigan but not currently practicing in the state, and also includes active doctors who are in administration, education, and research-"some 7 percent not engaged in patient care." This error results in an overestimated surplus, the PSC report says. OHMA'S projection is based on a more favorable economic climate, the PSC report adds. "We believe that this is a major drawback, since the drastically changed economic climate in Michigan will hamper recruitment from dut of the state, and will pose a serious obstacle to retaining physicians in the state," Favermen says in the report. "They assume physicians will even- tually find Michigan an unattractive place to practice. Our judgement is dif- ferent," Wicks said, adding that research has shown there is no relationship between a "bad economic climate" and retention of doctors in an area. Gov. William Milliken has established a task force to study solutions to the maldistribution problem, such as reimbursement programs for doctors who choose to go to underserved areas, according to Eugenia Carpenter, an assistant research scientist from the Univer- sity's School of Public Health. DISTINCTIVE HAIRSTYLING FOR MEN AND WOMEN Try a 1980 NEW LONG or SORT STYLE THE DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State.. 66-9329 East U. at So. U.... ,662-0354 Arborland ........ 971.9975 Maple Village .... 71-2733 4 4 4 EVERY MAN WOULD LIKE A LITTLE "PACO" IN HIS LIFE. Paco Rabanne pour homme: the scent that individualizes his style. Clean and bracing as a dry wind, filled with wild bittersweet notes of brisk herbals and the virility of rich aromatics. Gift him with 3 ozs. Natural Cologne Spray, $22; 4 ozs. each of: Cologne Concentrate, $21; After-Shave, $16. Jacobsonis OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. a 4