The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 5, 1982-Page 3 While we were away Prisoners riot at Huron Valley facility Inmates housed in the niture. Prisoners even managed to set "troublemaker" unit of the maximum fire in a counselor's office before of- security Huron Valley prison rioted ficials regained control.k sn Friday, injuring two prison guards and O commandeering their segregated unit for almost three hours.Phe f The disturbance was quickly subdued -Photographs of the a- by tactical units from the Phoenix termath of the Huron Correctional Facility, the state prison of southeastern Michigan, and the valley prison riot appear Michigan State Police. After the riot ong 16. was controlled. Huron Valley Warden: Page S William Grant placed the facility in a state of "lock-down"-the strictest security measure possible. THE INMATES, who were segregated in a maximum security unit, assaulted guards, then proceeded to smash windows and destroy fur- facial cuts and was released without hospitalization, while the other guard was hospitalized with a back injury. Both had been corrections officers for less than a year. Four inmates were See INMATES, Page 16 1 4 (Il "4-s Catherine Sireet I .... --------- m -L. m Cf) I $ f I t V7Z~ r Ann Street i ii ;g4ju yi Huron StreetL N Palmer Drive 4 DETOUR ROUTEh Zj77777UNDERCONSTRUCTION City road renovation disturbs traffic flow GOV. WILLIAM MILLIKEN warns graduates of nuclear war at the Univer- sity's 1982 Spring Commencement exercises which were held Saturday in .Crisler Arena. Milliken talks tough in conunencement speech Recent graduates were unusually recognition of her many contributions silent Saturday as Governor William' "on behalf of the arts, the equal rights Milliken, in a biting commencement amendment, and conservation issues," address, warned of the increasing according to a commencement probability of nuclear war and attacked statement. the political influence of special in- The University also honored art terest groups. historian Johjn Rewald with a Doctor of Speaking before a near-capacity Fine Arts degree for his distinguished crowd in Crisler Arena, Milliken also career as scholar, educator and writer. congratulated the graduates and His books include "The History of Im- wished them success in leading pressionism." "productive lives - lives that make a While not all graduating students par- difference." ticipated in Saturday's commencement HELEN MILLIKEN, the governor's exercises, over 6,000 students are ex- wife, received an honorary degree in pected to receive degrees this spring. Medical School's dean Local drivers, bicyclists, and pedestrians now must contend with several city road blocks and detours near the University's complex due to road repairs being conducted in con- junction with the Replacement Hospital Project. City engineers overseeing the project said the construction will cuase some inconveniences to drivers, but there are alternate routes for people to get from the north to the south side of the city. ACCORDING TO a report issued by the University Replacement Hospital Project, there are four areas in the city where normal traffic patterns will be interrupted: Huron St., between Fletcher and Washtenaw Pl., will be closed to traf- fic. Eastbound traffic on Huron St. will be routed south on Fletcher, then to North University to continue onto Washtenaw Ave. or Geddes Ave; " Glen St., between Catherine and Huron St., wil be closed to traffic, but the intersections between Ann and Clen St. and Catherine and Glen St. will remain open; * Catherine, presently a westbound, one-way street, will temporarily han- dle -two-way traffic between Glen St. and North Ingalls; " Parking will be prohibited on Flet- cher between North University and Huron St., on the north side of Catherine between State St. and North Ingalls, on the west side of North Ingalls between Huron St. and Catherine, and on Catherine between Glen and North Ingalls. All of the construction, except that on Huron St., will be completed by Sept. 15, according to city engineers. The repairs on Huron St. are scheduled for completion before this summer's city art fair, which begins on July 15 of this year. quits after After more than a decade of leading the University's medical activities, Medical School Dean and Medical Cen- ter Director John Gronvall will resign this summer to "explore other challenges," University President Harold Shapiro announced recently. "As dean, Dr. Gronvall has a record of significant accomplishments," Shapiro said in a statement concerning the resignation. Shapiro cited Gron- vall's extensive involvement in the planning and the efforts to gain gover- nmental approval for the University's $285 million Replacement Hospital Project. The statement also contained praise for Gronvall's development of an in- novative "medical service plan," which divides revenues from patient care between faculty physicians and the University. The plan "established an effective professional fee 12 years management system that has put the Medical School and its departments on a sound financial footing," Shapiro said. The statement did not reveal what Gronvall plans to do upon resigning. Gronvall came to Ann Arbor in 1968 following several faculty appointments at other universities, including a term as associate dean of the University of Mississippi Medical School. He succeeded Dr. William Hubbard as dean of the University's Medical School in 1971. Gronvall has a lengthy record of prominent membership in several national medical and health education organizations. He is a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of, Sciences and currently serves as chairman of the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, the body that ac- credits medical schools in the United States and Canada.