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July 10, 1981 - Image 13

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Michigan Daily, 1981-07-10

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The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 10, 1981-Page 13
GROUP DISCUSSES CUTS IN HUMAN SERVICES
Seminar held at Union

ContiuedfromPa e12:
SALESPERSONS: Commission. Sales expe
helpful. Car necessary. 20 hour trial period
Prudential Marketing, 1-600-7180. Leavemessa
1
SUMMER ARTS FESTIVA
Volunteers to work with the art fair July 21s
26th. Energetic persons needed to staff info.
and work with public and artists. 4-8 hrs. a day.
PR hackground preferred. Great work esper
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MANY FEMALE MODELS WANTED. $8.00/
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BUSINESS SE RVICES
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PUBLIC AUCTION SALE
SAT., JULY 11, 10uam.
FOR: CONSUMERS POWER OF MICHIGAN
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Everything sells to the highest bidder. OVE
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MISCELLANEOUS
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We buy, sell, repair, clean rugs and appraise
8555 or 995-7597. 320 E. Liberty. c
BIKESSCOOTERS
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cash.607 S Forest next to Village Corners. 662-
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(Continued from Page 3)
ter Act, and the Child Abuse and
Protection Act.
In their place, Sugarman said
Reagan has proposed five block grants
which would be given to state gover-
nments. The preliminary budget
proposals were passed by Congress on
June 26, and final reconciliation of
House and Senate versions should occur
by September.
According to Sugarman, these five
grants "are written in broad language
and permit states to do all of what has
been done under existing
legislation... if the states choose to
continue it."
SUGARMAN criticized the block
grant approach on four levels: he said it
makes no commitment to existing
human service organizations, federal
grants to local government would end,
(with all monies filtered through the
state government, they include no con-
sumer protection requirements - such
as public hearings to discuss disbur-
sement of funds - and require no
federal oversight of distribution

programs to prevent discrimination.
The only supervision of state disbur-
sements would be a semi-yearly audit,
which the state conducts itself.
Sugarman said the block grants are
funded to the state at 25 percent below
operating costs of current federal
programs, with the Reagan explanation
reportedly being that this much would
be saved by the reduction in ad-
ministration costs of keeping track of
overlapping programs on the federal
and state, county and local level.
Sugarman noted that others have put
:the potential savings "as low as 4 per-
cent" and Scott Bunton, a represen-
tative from the Association of Gover-
nors, put the budget cuts at "33 percent
to 40 percent with inflation ... which
leaves governors ina quandary."
STATING THAT most state gover-
nors support the concept of block grants
which gives them more flexibility in
deciding spending priorities, and elim-
nates the "disarray" of overlapping
programs that lead to "confusion,"
Sugarman termed the rapid, Oct. 1 shift
from federal to local as "irresponsible"

and called "83 lead days .... a laugh."
Andy Mott, Chairperson for the
Washington based Ad Hoc Coalition on
Block Grants, blasted the human ser-
vice law repeals and implementation of
block grants as "50 years of struggle
reduced to the lowest common
denominator."
THE MICHIGAN Director of the Of-
fice of Health and Medical Affairs, Jay
Ensley, admonished social service and
human service advocacy groups,
"Don't ask for more money, there isn't
any more." He lamented that Michigan
human service groups were operating
on a "bare bones" budget due to cuts
made in the financially troubled state
over the past three years, and predicts
that human service programs will be
running on 40 percent to 50 percent of
the 1978 budget level.
Ensley warned that some groups
would be cut from the budget, but that
budget predictions were difficult, due to
the continued "uncertainty at the
federal level. The federal fiscal year for
1981 begins in October, while Michigan
has already approved a budget that did
not include the Reagan administration
cuts,
HOME-OFFICE (Doctor's)
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By owner, in Mason, 12 mi.
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676-5081.
Join The

Coriolanus' triumphs
s
j after political turmoil
(Continued from Page9 between the Roman and Volscian
N Spurned and disgusted, Coriolanus runs ces.
to his former battlefield opponents, who Strange, that a Shakespear
R 40 bestow honor and position upon him. tragedy's success should rely on
dibus, His conflicting alliances, of course, cardboard similarity of its featu
of the
KENT bring despair and, ultimately, death. players, but that is exactly what1
UNDS transpired here. Unfortunately,t
EACH Coriolanus, like many of approach seems to have carried o
'thing Shakespeare's histories, is a very into the Festival's umpteenth stat
hure: political play. But in the Henry VI Taming of the Shrew, which I will de
Mon- trilogy, or for that matter in Richard II,
EIE II.,.in a forthcoming feature,
N0710 it is the personalities of the political in
figures that constitute the meat of the
drama. In Bedford's vision of
Coriolanus' world, the men of might are " ||f
relatively indistinguishable; the only
. 769- interesting character of the drama is
the collective personality of the com-
moners. ....:
oles & THE LIGHTS first come up on a stark
op for stage, barren save for a hissing, :2:
6986. wriggling cluster of actors posed on the
IzoolS customary stage center platform. The lwa
serpentine plebeians, though full of
complaints about their sorry economic
ugust plights emerge as the only entity that
ranceu can command action. The rich have . <t
'a Bill, evidently become decadently ineffec-
dUtc tual in their comfort. 7ENSA
motor Ote/
se has Other productions of the play have {
baths, generally put heavy emphasis on the =
ed ... suspect relationship between the hero U
dUty and his mother, Volumnia. The script
near does point to interesting Freudian im-
UO8o1 plications that overshadow Coriolanus'-:.
marriage, but all of this is overlooked in <.E..SUN
this production, just like all other per-
hare 2 sonal matters surrounding the
neat. patrician circles.
6Y5714 This is strange and welcome territory
for Stratford: Celebrity has long been
an important drawing card for the On-
tarians, ensemble work a secondary PRICE OF TWO
consideration at best. Yet here, despite : WHEN IN UNFO
abtes, the presence of Big Name Len Cariou
10 pm (past credits include the title role in HOURS:
gan at Sweeney Todd and the part of Jack in F"3':0am-2:00 o
e. 971- Alan Alda's Four Seasons, director
W0717 .. SAFT-ToHdUcRS.2::~rpm
Bedford has fashioned a production tn >__ ___
ff which the most stirring moment is no I
soliloquy, but an eerily stylized battle

for-
ean
the

red
has
this Daily Arts Staff
over
b at
tail

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