The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, June 5, 1984 - Page 3 SECOND FRONT PAGE vic rev rer ser goi Stu Review: Save counseling budget By MARLA GOLD Johnson, the vice president in charge of counseling concluded that some services need more money to The University should not cut its counseling ser- services, and Vice President for Academic Affairs serve the number of students that come in for help. es' budgets further and needs to continuously and Provost Billy Frye, in charge of the University's DR. GERALD Marsden, Director of the Counseling view its programs, according to a major University general fund budget. Center on Huron Street, and co-chairman of the task port obtained last week. The task force, which spent two years reviewing 63 force, said "there aren't enough resources to go The main reason for the review of the counseling counseling services, has recommended that the around" since the budget cuts. rvices was to check if the $6 million budget "was University not implement any more budget cuts to The budget cuts are part of a five-year plan to ing where it was needed," said Vice President for counseling and that a committee continuously review reallocate $20 million dollars within the University's wdent Services Henry Johnson. the equality of their services. general fund budget to store up "high priority" "AT THIS time, no conclusive answers have been The task force, made up of students, professors, areas. drawn," said Johnson. The review was prepared for and various directors of specific counseling services, See STOP, Page 7 Sign up start for summer youthi eorps By JUDY FRANKE Registration opened yesterday for a state-run summer employment program designed to create 15,000 jobs for unemployed Michigan residents between the ages of 18 and 21, but the program's exisitence depends on the success of a bill now in the state legislature. The Michigan Youth Corps "proved overwhelmingly successful" when it was initiated last summer, said Kelly Rossman, acting administrator for the program. She said preference will be given to older applicants in the 18-21 age group and those who come from families in which the principal wage earner is unemployed. ALTHOUGH the application process has begun, the fate of the Youth Corps rests in the state legislature. The Senate is scheduled to vote today on a $17.9 million appropriation which would allow the program to run this summer. Rossman is optimistic about the program's chances in the legislature because it has a great deal of support. Last year, it received strong bipartisan backing with only seven legislators op- posing it. Among the opponents was Rep. Margaret O'Connor (R-Ann Arbor), who said in the House journal that the program was "not a wise use for tax money" and called for permanent adult employment programs. LAST YEAR, 70,000 young people ap- plied for 25,000 openings statewide. This year's decrease in the number of positions is due to the implementation of two other labor projects, the Com- munity Service Corps and the Michigan Conservation Corps. The three projects See SIGN, Page 11 F Art school redesigns programs to survive CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA/Daily Lunchtime A woman buys a handful of cookies from a vendor outside the Student Ac- tivities Building yesterday. Candidates ight for Demnoeratie nomnination By GEORGEA KOVANIS Last spring, the University's art school was fighting to survive. This spring - nearly one year after the school was ordered to cut its budget 18 percent - survival means making the school more accessible to non-art students, expanding studio space to ac- commodate an influx of graduate students, and naming a new ad- ministrator to work on recruiting and counseling graduate students. LAST JULY, the school was told to reduce its budget by $260,000 over the next five years as part of the Univer- sity's five-year plan to reallocate $20 million of its general fund budget into "high priority" areas. The mandate, authored by Billy Frye, vice president for academic af- fairs and University provost, told the school to boost the number of non-art students taking art school classes. In doing so, the school may begin teaching art classes on Central Campus as early as next January. Art school administrators say these Central Campus classes will entice studnets - especially LSA students - into taking art classes. And school of- ficials say they support this plan because it will expose more students to the arts. ACCORDING to Wendel Heers, art school dean, "students who don't have the time or energy to get (to North Campus) might take '(a class)" on Central Campus. "We'd like people to know about us and come to our classes," said Barbara Cervenka, who has been nominated for a new assistant deanship in the school. "(It's) really an excellent way to make art classes more available," she said. Cervenka's appointment will go before the University's regents for ap- proval this month. Part of her job will be to recruit and counsel the increased number of grad students who will be in the school. She will also coordinate alumni programs. Other changes in the school's programs are expected to be approved by University administrators this month. OPENING MORE art classes to non- art students will change the focus of the program, administrators say. "The faculty likes to have lit. school students in their classes because they bring a different point of view," Heers said. The new Central Campus classes will more than likely be introductory-level courses, according to William Lewis, art school associate dean. Ad- ministrators say they are currently negotiating for classroom space in the West Engineering Building. The art school is also restructuring the credit hours for its courses to make the courses more appealing to non-art students who have been turned off because many of the courses offered only two credits for many hours of lab work. Beginning in 1985, officials plan to give students three credits for each of the courses which are now worth two and four credits. The increase in graduate students who will serve as teaching assistants will give faculty members more flexibility in scheduling classes - they will teach two per term instead of the three they teach now. According to Cervenka, the school admitted about 40 -percent more graduate students for this coming fall than it did last year. Because of the in- crease, the school will be renting studio space exclusively for graduate students in the Printing Services Building on Green Road. From AP and UPI The three Democratic presidential rivals sprinted yesterday for the finish line of their marathon primary cam- paign, with Walter Mondale racing cross-country and back again in an at- tempt to lock up the nomination and Gary Hart focusing on New Jersey as he tried to thwart Mondale's bid. Hart spent the day in New Jersey, while the Rev. Jesse Jackson was on the opposite coast, seeking a share of the 306 delegates at stake in California. AS THE former vice president closed in on the 1,967 delegates needed to win the nomination, his stubborn rivals Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson vowed to fight on whatever the delgate numbers show. See HART, Page 4