Submitted by: Walter L. Strong, Senior Vice President University Relations • EXTERNAL RELATIONS REPORT HIGHLIGHTS

Recent Alumni Events/Activities

o Twenty-four alumni went on a 15-day Scandinavian trip to Denmark, Sweden and Norway during the month of July.

o The Medical School Alumni Association held a reunion of the class of 1944 at the Grand Traverse Resort in Traverse City on July 26.

o On August 15, the 1990-91 Alumni Association Executive Committee held a retreat at the Golf Club.

o On September 5 a pre-flight departure orientation was held at Alumni House for alumni booked on the Southern European Treasures trip scheduled September 13-27 with stops in Rome, Florence, Innsbruck and Oberammergau. A pre-flight departure orientation was also held on September 6 for alumni booked on the sold-out New England Color Tour September 26 to October 2 .

0 On Sunday, September 9 an Alumni Association area meeting and brunch were held at the Detroit Golf Club for /Sherwood Forest alumni.

• o The Washington, D.C. Alumni Clubs of Wayne State, State, and the University of Michigan held a joint meeting at the Botanical Gardens on September 11. This meeting, planned in conjunction with the Offices of Governmental Relations of the three universities, was designed to host the members of the Michigan Congressional delegation.

Upcoming Events/Activities

o The Gas House Gang, an alumni support organization for Wayne State athletics, will hold its second annual golf outing at the Romeo Golf Club on September 14.

o The Alumni Association will sponsor a booth at the Detroit Festival for the Arts on September 21, 22 and 23. Alumni volunteers will sell T-shirts, sweatshirts and other items.

o The Alumni Association Board of Directors will hold its first meeting of the 1990- 91 year in Alumni House on September 24.

DEVELOPMENT & PUBLIC Agenda September 12, 1990 • AFFAIRS COMMITTEE 2 o The Medical Alumni Association's 1990-91 annual fund kick-off dinner will be held September 26 at Joe Muer's restaurant. • o On October 6 the Alumni Association will participate in the Academic Open House/Homecoming sponsored by the Division of Student Affairs. Alumni volunteers will welcome participants with free coffee, and provide an alumni display/sales table. o On October 9 the Women of Wayne Alumni Association will sponsor a reception for women faculty and staff in the Alumni Lounge from 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm. o The Alumni Association will host a metro meeting and brunch on October 28 at the Lockmoor Club for and Harper Woods alumni. o The Alumni Association will sponsor a pre-departure orientation session on October 15 for alumni traveling to Rio de Janeiro on November 4-12. o On October 17 the Alumni Club of Flint will sponsor a dinner and program at the Sports Creek Raceway. •

• -. 3 Community Relations Events

Recent Events/Activities

o Vice President Arthur L. Johnson was the principal speaker at a program observing the 25th Anniversary of the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on July 30. The program was a function of the Detroit area office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

o Vice President Johnson was the guest speaker at the Detroit office U.S. Peace Corps' "A Night in Africa" on September 6 at the Museum of African American History.

o The University Cultural Center Association (UCCA) is currently considering candidates for a special position in UCCA which will be responsible for coordinating the implementation and funding of the UCCA master plan.

Coming Events/Activities

0 The fourth annual Detroit Festival of the Arts will be held September 21, 22 and 23, 1990 in the University Cultural Center. As in the past, major segments of the Festival, including the Children's Fair, will be located on the Wayne State • University campus. o The Annual Celebration of the Arts Program sponsored by the Office of Community Relations in conjunction with the President's Committee on Cultural Affairs will be held on October 12 and 13.

o Vice President Johnson will chair the session, "Race and Ethnicity in the American Labor Movement," on October 20 from 10:00 am to noon at the Walter P. Reuther Library during the meetings of the 1990 North American Labor History Conference.

o Vice President Johnson will be honored with United States District Judge Avern Cohn at the annual dinner of the Afro-Asian Institute of Histadrut on October 23 at the Westin Hotel.

• 4

Breakdown of McGregor Memorial Conference Center Events -- Fiscal Year Comparison, June/July, 1989-1990 • Y-T-D Y-T-D 6/89 6/90 7/89 7/90 FY 89 FY 90

Classes 22 23 11 10 87 134 Conferences 7 12 4 26 121 153 Lectures 2 4 5 2 45 62 Meetings 80 124 68 64 758 867 Performances 9 12 3 3 154 121 Seminars 32 5 0 8 192 128 Special Events 21 19 26 251 75 179 Weddings 1 1 0 1 1 7

TOTAL 174 200 107 139 1533 1651

FOOD SERVICE FUNCTIONS* Breakfasts 11 20 23 21 97 136 Luncheons 43 45 30 34 372 263 Dinners/Banquets 12 11 18 14 112 81 Receptions 13 13 7 7 140 101 Catered Events -- Off Premises 33 45 14 30 380 465

TOTAL FOOD SERVICE 112 134 92 106 1101 1046 •

* Food service functions are also frequently part of event functions.

Program Highlights

0 Efficacy Detroit Recognition Dinner, June 6. Efficacy Detroit hosted a recognition dinner for educators and volunteers who have supported their program by attending a program which attempts to motivate minority youth to develop their fullest potential, both in academic and extra- curricular activities. The program recognized efficacy essay contest winners, educators and volunteers. Guests were entertained by the Southeastern High School Gospel Choir.

0 Merrill-Palmer Institute Citation Award Presentation and Reception, June 7. Sis Wenger, community education manager of Maplegrove; and the late Richard F. Huegli, chief executive officer of United Community Services for 25 years, were the recipients of The Merrill-Palmer lnstitute's Citation Award for outstanding contributions to the field of family life and human development. Mrs. Richard Huegli accepted the award on behalf of her late husband. McGregor provided the refreshments for the reception held in conjunction with the award ceremony. • 5 • 0 Rosa L. Parks Scholarship Foundation Luncheon, June 12. Nearly 50 scholarship award certificates were presented at a luncheon attended by approximately 130 guests in recognition of the 1990 Rosa Parks Scholars. The foundation, which was established in 1980, grants one-year $2,000 scholarships to outstanding Michigan high school seniors who plan to pursue a higher education.

0 Corporate Leadership Awards, June 14. Three hundred Wayne State University and community guests honored Dennis Green, Business Administration '67, Chief Auditor for Citicorp and Citibank, N.A.; and Helen Petrauskas, Liberal Arts (Mathematics) '66 and Law '71, Vice President, Environmental and Safety Engineering, Ford Motor Company at the Eighth Annual Corporate Leadership Awards Program and dinner. Senior Vice President Walter Strong served as master of ceremonies for the program in the Community Arts Gallery. President David Adamany delivered greetings to the audience and was assisted in the awards presentation by Dean William Volz, School of Business Administration; and Dean John Reed, Law School.

0 STEP (Summer Training and Education Program) Kick-Off, June 22. The second year of the STEP program for 14 to 16 year old Detroit school students began with two kick-off events at McGregor Memorial. Fifty students who participated last year are joining 75 new students in the program this year . Fifty persons, including work site supervisors and WSU staff, attended a luncheon at the Center and approximately 150 students and their parents • attended the evening dinner. Seymour Wolfson, Professor of Computer Science, College of Liberal Arts, and Paula Wood, Associate Dean, College of Education, co-direct this federally-funded project.

o Faculty/Administration Building Opening Reception, June 26. The atrium of the Faculty/Administration Building was the site of the dedication program and opening reception, which marked the completion of moves of more than 300 offices to the new location. Brief remarks were presented by President David Adamany, Governor James Blanchard, Richard Van Dusen, vice chair of the Board of Governors, and Charles Jeffries, president of the Academic Senate. McGregor provided the refreshments and decorations.

0 Governor's Conference on Employer-Sponsored Child Care, June 28. The Michigan Department of Commerce, the School of Labor and Industrial Relations of Michigan State University and WSU's Merrill-Palmer Institute co­ sponsored this day-long event held to assist employers in choosing the correct child care program for their company. One hundred and eighty persons attended the event which was highlighted by remarks from Governor James Blanchard, Mrs. Janet Blanchard, Ellen Galinsky, Co-President, Families and Work Institute, New York, and Ronald Kutscher, Associate Commissioner, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Prior to the dinner and evening program, President • David Adamany hosted a reception for the guests. 6 o Citypac Writing to Read Training Transformational Leadership Workshop, July 17-August 3. • Detroit was selected as a host city for an IBM-sponsored program aimed at training educators in the use of computers in teaching the language arts. Approximately 225 Detroit Public Schools first-grade teachers participated in this computer-based language arts training program held at the McGregor Memorial Conference Center.

o "Market Analysis in An Information Age: Where to Find and How to Use Economic Data," July 18. The Michigan Metropolitan Information Center (MIMIC), a unit of the Center for Urban Studies, and Grain's Detroit Business sponsored this day-long conference held in the Community Arts Center. The purpose of the conference was to show companies how to use census and economic data as an aid in making business decisions. About 100 persons attended the conference, which was highlighted by remarks from Dr. Barbara Bryant, director, U.S. Census Bureau. •

• 7 • Print Media Coverage National Scene

o The Chronicle of Higher Education reported June 27 that Professor Michael T. Martin, director of the Third World Center at Princeton University, has been named chairman of WSU's Department of Africana Studies.

0 International attention was focused on the General Electric Company and Wayne State University following an announcement July 1O that GE found a way to make diamond crystals of unexcelled purity. Scientists in WSU's Institute for Manufacturing Research (IMR) determined the crystals have unsurpassed heat­ conducting ability and a level of radiation-hardness that makes them nearly impervious to damage. Their physical properties were measured, using an advanced thermal wave technique, by Professor Robert L. Thomas, IMR Director and Physics; Professor Pao-Kuang "P.K." Kuo, Physics; Professor Roger W. Pryor, IMR; and Ms. Lanhua Wei, graduate assistant and doctoral candidate in Physics. News media carrying the story included the July 11 New York Times and Wall Street Journal and the July 12 Detroit Free Press. A joint paper by the GE-WSU team appeared July 15 in Physical Review B - Condensed Matter, a professional journal published by the American Physical Society. Professor Thomas also was interviewed for a forthcoming story in New Scientist. • o The Chronicle of Higher Education July 25 reported a $128,500 bequest from the estate of Richard C. Kelii for scholarships in the School of Medicine.

0 Vice President Arthur Johnson, Community Relations, was quoted in a July 29 New York Times Magazine cover story headlined "The Tragedy of Detroit," based on excerpts from a forthcoming book titled "Devil's Night: And Other True Tales of Detroit" - both of which are critical of Detroit. He also was quoted in a July 30 Detroit News article reporting reaction from community leaders to The Times piece in which Johnson was quoted as saying, "We are engaged in the most determined, feverish effort to save Detroit... Because Detroit is special. It's the first major city in the United States to have taken on the symbols of a black city. It has elected a strong, powerful black mayor, powerful in both his personality and his office. Detroit, more than anywhere else, has gathered power and put it in black hands." In The News story Johnson said, "This isn't a total death scene here. My wife and I have no intention of moving from Detroit and I suspect there are many others like us. There is a spirit of survival, of determination, a will not to be taken by fear, among the people of Detroit." He told The News the excerpt unfairly suggests he wants a city of blacks only. "I have said consistently that I am not interested in having a black, segregated city; I want a city that is hospitable to all (racial and ethnic) groups," Johnson said. He also subsequently wrote a commentary printed in the August 5 Detroit News, taking issue with conclusions drawn by "Devil's Night" author Ze'ev • Chafets - particularly his characterization of Detroit as a "Third World City." 8 o President David Adamany was interviewed July 30 by the Des Moines Register on the appointment of Milton D. Glick, former WSU Professor and Chemistry • Department Chairman, as interim president of Iowa State University. o The July-:August issue of the Campus Law Enforcement Journal, an internationally distributed publication for law enforcement administrators, carried a commencement photo with caption of Director Dallas Schneider, Public Safety, and May graduate Brian Miller, a Howard Donnelly Award recipient who became a Public Safety Officer immediately after graduation. o Professor William M. Chavis, M.D., Obstetrics and Gynecology, is quoted in an August Essence Magazine article describing physical, emotional and psychological factors that may affect sexual activity and performance. Every animal - including the human animal - has a sex drive that's necessary for procreation," Chavis said. o The August 6 People magazine carried a feature on Robert Kearns, former WSU engineering professor who recently was awarded $5.1 million by a federal district court jury in a patent infringement suit against Ford Motor Company.

0 Professor Tyrone Tillery, History, provided insight for a 25-year retrospective piece on the Watts section of Los Angeles which was printed in the August 8 Detroit Free Press and transmitted to Knight-Ridder News Service clients nationwide. Tillery said the Watts riot came at a time when blacks' rising expectations, based on recent passage of civil rights legislation, were • outstripping the realities of inner city life, rife with poverty, unemployment and terrible police relations. From 1964 to 1968 American cities including Detroit, Washington, Newark and Chicago, suffered 257 racial uprisings, Tillery said. o The August 16 New England Journal of Medicine published a study by Wayne State medical researchers describing a test they devised to predict potential victims of pre-eclampsia, a sometimes life-threatening condition that often occurs among pregnant women. The August 16 Providence (Rhode Island) Journal and the Detroit Free Press also carried stories on the medical advance and interviewed Professor James Sowers, M.D., Internal Medicine and senior author of the study (see related entry under Electronic Coverage, August 15). o The August 20 People magazine focused on Professor Janet Hankin, Sociology, and her husband, Professor Allen Goodman, Chairman, Economics, in an article about couples who desire to have children after they have reached the age of 40 (see related entry under Print Coverage, Local Scene, August 8). • 9 • State Scene o Ph.D. recipients Joe and Edna Gonzales, spouses employed by the Bay City Public Schools administration, were congratulated by President David Adamany in a photo with caption printed in a 12-page school district supplement distributed as a section of the July 1 Bay City Times.

o The July-August issue of Michigan Woman magazine, in "A Salute to Michigan's Top 20 Women Graduates," included two from Wayne State - Amanda Conti, an electrical engineering and Italian double major, and four-year WSU Merit Scholar Sandra Niedballa, a finance major.

o Three College of Engineering stories were in the August ESD Technology. One reported establishment of bachelor and master of science degree programs in manufacturing engineering and Professor Donald Falkenburg's appointment to chair the Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Department. A second announced openings for the graduate certificate program in polymer engineering. A third announced openings in the master of science degree program in hazardous waste management. Both programs are offered by the Chemical Engineering Department.

0 Mildred Jeffrey, Chair, Board of Governors, will not seek re-election to a third term this fall, the August 11 Lansing State Journal reported. The story was • carried first in the August 1O Detroit Free Press. Local Scene

o Professor Henry Pratt, Political Science, was appointed Associate Provost for undergraduate retention and assessment, the June 28 Observer & Eccentric Newspapers reported.

o The July 2 Detroit Free Press carried a feature story on 93-year-old former Professor William Reveno, M.D., who taught at the School of Medicine from 1924 until his retirement in 1983. The article mentioned that he was one of 12 founders of the American Diabetes Association a half-century ago.

o President David Adamany was quoted in a front page Detroit News story July 3 about a University of Michigan professor's study suggesting that the Michigan Education Trust (MET) program faces insolvency in two or three years because its financing is based on flawed assumptions. "I'm on the record as having very serious doubts about the actuarial assumptions," said Adamany, a former MET board member. "A number of us (on the board) did raise very substantial questions and had very substantial concerns."

0 The July 5 Detroit News carried the obituary of retired Professor Louis L. Friedland, 81, former chairman of the Criminal Justice Department and the • Political Science Department. 10 o "Seasons of Grace," a history of the Archdiocese of Detroit between 1833 and the 1950s written by Leslie Woodcock Tentler and published by the Wayne State • University Press, was the subject of a story in the Detroit News religion section July 6. o Professor Susan Adelman, M.D., Surgery, and recently installed president of the Michigan State Medical Society, was profiled in a July 6 Detroit Jewish News feature. o The Macomb Daily reported July 7 that high school graduate David LaPrairie will attend WSU this fall with scholarship aid from the Michigan Society of Professional Engineers.

0 The Detroit News Washington Bureau reported July 8 that U.S. Representative John Conyers Jr., D-Detroit, chairman of the Government Operations Committee (GOC), accepted an IBM invitation to attend a May 25 news conference at WSU announcing a $200,000 grant to the College of Education while a GOC subcommittee is investigating charges of fraud and favoritism in IBM contracts with the Navy. Conyers denied any relationship between a seven-month interruption in the investigation and IBM's grant to WSU. WJBK-TV2 aired the report on its July 8 evening news (see related entry under Electronic Coverage, July 8).

0 Vice President Arthur Johnson, Community Relations, was quoted in a July 8 Detroit News follow-up article on the impact of Nelson Mandala's Detroit visit. • "Clearly, his visit has raised an awareness among blacks of the struggle we have yet to make; his visit was a wellspring of hope," Johnson said. o A July 9 Detroit News feature on efforts to identify ways of reducing described research by Dr. John Waller Jr., M.D., Chairman, Community Medicine and Director of WSU's Center for the Control and Prevention of Violence, who has studied Detroit neighborhoods for four years. His work is the nucleus of a forthcoming report on violence reduction by a Wayne County task force, one member of which is Professor Jacqueline Campbell, Nursing. "Community organization is the greatest deterrent to crime," Waller says, observing that violence is discouraged where people know and care for each other. But in some unkempt neighborhoods, Waller says, "Just by looking, you know you are in an area where people don't know their neighbors. How can you care about anyone you don't know?" Campbell says the task force was influenced in part by a five-year follow-up of crime victims treated at Henry Ford Hospital which found that such trauma is "a chronic recurrent disease related to lifestyle and environment." She says the task force hopes "to develop a protocol for treatment; if it's domestic violence, social services will be involved. For other victims, there will be counseling or referrals to substance abuse programs." • 11

0 Grain's Detroit Business carried a story July 9 about a daylong conference • scheduled July 18 at WSU on "Market Analysis in an Information Age: Where to Find and How to Use Economic Data." Census Bureau Director Barbara Bryant was among 100 participants at the conference, sponsored by the Center for Urban Studies and Grain's.

0 A July 1O Detroit Free Press article about the current state of the cryonics movement mentions that Robert Ettinger, retired Wayne State physics professor, is a leader in the movement and author of a book on the subject. Ettinger was again mentioned in a feature on the same subject in the Free Press August 7.

0 A July 11 Detroit News article about area fencers competing in the U.S. Olympic Festival at St. Paul, Minnesota, included three references to WSU. The story focused on Brooke Schneider, the Under-19 national epee champion and daughter of Director Dallas Schneider, Public Safety. The article also said former WSU fencer Yuri Rabinovich coaches another festival competitor and noted that Ms. Schneider began fencing as a student of Maestro Istvan Danosi, retired WSU fencing coach.

0 The July 11-17 Michigan Chronicle ran a photo with caption showing Yvette Chestang, a May graduate of the College of Fine, Performing and Communication Arts, with her father, Dean Leon Chestang, Social Work .

0 The Grosse Pointe News July 12 reported the appointment of three principals • in the school district, two of whom hold degrees from WSU. o The July 13 Detroit News reported that Vice President Arthur Johnson, Community Relations, was re-elected as a vice chair of the New Detroit Board of Trustees.

o Visiting Professor Jane Hale Morgan, University Libraries, was elected a member-at-large of Delta Dental Plan of Michigan's executive committee for a one-year term, the Detroit News reported July 13.

o The Detroit Free Press reported July 14 that Robert Kearns, former Wayne State engineering professor, was awarded $6.3 million by a federal jury in his patent infringement suit against the Ford Motor Company.

o Professor Edward Littlejohn, Law, was quoted in a Detroit Free Press article July 16 suggesting that Detroit police officers accused of brutality frequently face little or no official departmental sanction. "If that's what the data shows, I'm disappointed," Littlejohn said. "When I was on the (police) commission, that pattern was evident and it was something that we constantly worked and • pressured the police administration to take citizen complaints more seriously." 12 o The July 17 Detroit Free Press carried a front page story about the Summer Academy and Skills Self-Enrichment Program at WSU, a retention program for • 56 high-achieving minority students admitted as freshmen this fall under regular admissions criteria. Financed by the Michigan Youth Corps and Wayne State University, the program hopes to stem the minority dropout rate by enhancing students' reading, writing, mathematics and computer skills before they begin university studies. "Our main concern is giving students additional academic resources together with survival skills so they can successfully complete college," said President David Adamany. WJR-AM and WDET-FM newscasts carried similar reports (see related entry under Electronic Coverage, July 17). o Professor Robert Strozier, English, received a Board of Governors Faculty Recognition Award for his publication of a major study of cultural and linguistic theory, "Saussure, Derrida, and the Metaphysics of Subjectivity," the Detroit Free Press July 18 north zone edition reported. o A July 19 Detroit Free Press article, reporting that University of Michigan regents would consider a 6.5 percent tuition increase on that date and Michigan State trustees would vote on a 7.2 percent hike July 20, mentioned that WSU governors approved an average 6.4 percent increase in June.

0 A July 19 column by Joe Falls in the Detroit News highlighted the career of Wayne State alumnus Vic Zucco, recapping his years with the WSU and Chicago Bears football teams in the 1950s and the evolution of his business career to ownership of the Schuss Mountain golf course/condominium complex. • 0 Former Detroit attorney Abdeen Jabara, a WSU law graduate and president of the Washington-basedAmerican Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, would leave that post August 31 but remain on the group's board of directors, the Detroit Free Press reported July 19. o The July 23 Detroit News quoted Professor Wilbur Rich, Political Science, in an article examining the Detroit City Council's increasing independence from the administration on some major issues. "Comerica was simply the wrong fight," Rich said. "It would have been foolhardy to turn the deal down just to show you've got guts and can be independent of the mayor."

0 The Detroit Free Press quoted Professor Eugene Schoener, M.D., Community Medicine and Director of the Addiction Research Institute, in a story July 25 about whether alcoholics can drink so-called near-beer safely. Schoener says when an alcoholic drinks something that reminds him of an alcoholic beverage, the behavior triggers a desire for the real thing. "Even though, physiologically, very small amounts of alcohol do not necessarily trigger heavy drinking, the knowledge and expectation might trigger an alcoholic who is already conditioned to respond to alcohol," Schoener says. "In my own research, we couldn't document that drinking some alcohol necessarily triggers in the alcoholic a desire to drink; however, this is just like Russian roulette for the alcoholic." • 13 • 0 A July 30 Detroit News article examining whether "second-hand" smoke is hazardous to nonsmokers included quotes from Director Raymond Novak, Institute of Chemical Toxicology. "When you smell something like a solvent or cleaning agent or tobacco smoke, you have the potential for getting those chemicals into your system rapidly," he said. "Once they enter the bloodstream, they are distributed throughout the body... to include the liver, the kidney and the brain."

0 A July 30 Detroit Free Press article, reporting U.S. District Judge Avern Cohn's criticism of the Michigan Supreme Court for failing to review Court of Appeals decisions that subsequently are accepted for U.S. Supreme Court review, mentioned that the Joyce and Avern Cohn Fund of the United Jewish Charities of Detroit recently gave $50,000 to the WSU Law School for a study and critique of Michigan's appellate court system.

0 Works by Professor James Hartway, Music, are being performed this summer on both sides of the Atlantic, the Detroit Free Press reported July 30. Flutist Laura Larson and harpist Kerstin Allvin are playing Hartway's "Detours" this summer at concerts in Paris, Germany, Finland and Sweden while soprano Frances Brockington is doing his "Songs for Ronnie" at the Art Song Festival in Oberlin, Ohio.

0 The Health Care Weekly Review reported July 30 that WSU's Internal Medicine students had a 90 percent pass rate on the American Board of Internal Medicine • examination. The 47 students placed WSU in the top 5 percent for large internal medicine training programs nationwide, including two who were in the 99th percentile.

o Reuben T. Bergman, part-time faculty, Finance and Business Economics and retired Michigan National Corporation executive, will spend most of August teaching business courses in Krakow, Poland, the Detroit News reported July 31. He will lecture Polish businessmen, students and teachers in marketing and financial planning under a program sponsored by the Polish University Abroad and the Krakow Industrial Society.

o Professor Michael Zemel, Nutrition and Food Science, recently lunched at McDonald's with Detroit Free Press health writer Bill Laitner, as reported in Laitner's July 31 article. They discussed fast-food nutritional values and the switch from beef fat to all-vegetable oils tor cooking trench fries to eliminate cholesterol and reduce saturated fat. For lunch, Zemel ordered a cheeseburger but told the counter employee, "hold the burger." • 14

0 Professor Charles Hyde, History, and his views about the demolition of historic buildings in Detroit were the focus of an August 1 Detroit News article. "I'm a • preservationist, so it is very painful sometimes," says Hyde, who for 14 years has documented landmarks before their destruction, including Dodge Main, the Olympia, the Monroe Block and the Buhl Company warehouse. "I think historic buildings, in general, serve as gateways to the past," Hyde says. "I think they provide people with a sense of history, a sense of continuity; but I think there is a prevailing notion that new is better, old is bad."

0 A story about several Oakland County high school students who participated in the Music Department's 1990 Summer Chamber Music Seminar ran in the August 1 Detroit Free Press north zone edition.

0 A picture page in the August 1-7 Michigan Chronicle covering the Detroit Compact Honors Breakfast showed Professor Creigs Beverly, Social Work, delivering the keynote address to more than 200 Mumford High School students and their families, along with Detroit Compact and Detroit Board of Education officials.

0 The August 1-7 Michigan Chronicle reported that the 11th National Black United Front Convention and Education Summit on the progress of implementing the African Cultural Curriculum (Portland model) in public schools would be held August 2-5 at Wayne State University. 0 The Detroit Free Press carried a feature August 2 about Rodney Swanigan, a • 25-year-old ex-Army airborne infantryman and former semiprofessional football player with a wife and three children who recently co-founded a house-painting business and plans to play football as a WSU freshman.

0 Professor Yi-chi Kong, Immunology and Microbiology, is profiled in an August 2 Grosse Pointe News story prompted by her receipt of a Board of Governors Distinguished Faculty Fellowship.

0 Professor Franklin McDonald, M.D., Internal Medicine and Chief of Nephrology, is directing a study at Harper Hospital seeking ways to slow progression of kidney disease, the Grosse Pointe News reported August 2.

0 The August 2 Grosse Pointe News reported that the Grosse Pointe chapter of the Women of Wayne presented a $1,500 check to the Women of Wayne Incentive Scholarship Fund.

0 WSU plans to convert the former offices of the Unisys Federal Credit Union into a garage for the motor pool, the August 6 Crain's Detroit Business reported. Senior Vice President Ria Frijters, Administration and Finance, said the $465,000 purchase of the 10,000-square-foot property completes WSU's acquisition of "all the property between Burroughs and Antoinette streets on the east side of Cass." • 15

0 George Weeks' August 7 Detroit News column analyzed a recent statewide poll • conducted by the Center for Urban Studies showing Governor Blanchard ahead of gubernatorial candidate John Engler, 44 percent to 39 percent, and another poll by Market Opinion Research indicating Blanchard held a 48-34 lead.

0 An August 7 Detroit News article exploring the issue of trust in the Big Three contract negotiations asked seven authorities to comment on trust, team-building and conflict resolution, one of whom was Lillian Genser, Education Director, Center for Peace and Conflict Studies.

0 The August 8 Detroit News and Detroit Free Press both carried the obituary of the late Professor C. Dale Vinyard, Political Science, a WSU faculty member for 27 years who died August 3. His death also was reported August 7 in the Daily Tribune.

0 An August 8 Detroit Free Press feature about couples who have children when the wife is 40 or older includes comments by Professor Janet Hankin, Sociology, and her husband, Professor Allen Goodman, Chairman, Economics, parents of an 18-month-old daughter. Hankin believes she is more relaxed about motherhood than a younger woman might be and both say they enjoy the idea of being in their 60s when daughter Sara is a teen-ager. "As long as we're both healthy at that time there shouldn't be any major concerns," Hankin says.

0 Members of the WSU Dance Company were listed by the Detroit Free Press in • its August 8 north zone edition. 0 Professor Wilbur Rich, Political Science, was quoted in an August 8 Detroit News article attributing Barbara-Rose Collins' 13th Congressional District Democratic primary victory to her relationship with Mayor Coleman Young. Rich said he believes Young was on voters' minds as they cast ballots for Collins.

0 An August 9 Detroit Free Press profile of 13th Congressional District candidate Barbara-Rose Collins mentioned that she attended Wayne State University.

0 The August 9 Grosse Pointe News carried a story about Stuart Itzkowitz, Counselor, Education, recipient of the first professional achievement award given by the Academic Staff Professional Development Committee, and printed a photo of President David Adamany congratulating Itzkowitz.

0 Detroit News columnist Pete Waldmeir mentioned that he attended Wayne State in his August 1o commentary on Ze'ev Chafets' critical review of Detroit in a forthcoming book and a New York Times Magazine story based on book excerpts. "I have not read a word that Ze'ev Chafets has written about Detroit that I did not agree with," Waldmeir wrote . • 16 o Professor Dennis Tini, Music, is president-elect of the International Association of Jazz Educators for 1990-92 and will be its president for 1992-94, the Detroit • Free Press reported August 11. o The August 13 Detroit Free Press printed a letter written by President David Adamany which expressed appreciation for an earlier story on WSU's Summer Academy and Skills Self-Enrichment Program, but added that the program is a joint effort of the university, industry and state government. "The program is funded in part through a grant from the Michigan Department of Labor under its Michigan Youth Corps Blue Ribbon Project," Adamany wrote. "The Youth Corps provided summer employment funding for some students and also salary for supervisors. In addition, IBM has invested more than $20,000 in the form of an equipment grant." o Grain's Detroit Business reported August 13 that the 14th International Conference on Organometallic Chemistry would take place August 19-24 on the WSU campus. o The August 13 Health Care Weekly Review reported that Professor J. Edison Pontes, M.D., Chairman, Urology, has been named chief of the urology section at Harper-Grace Hospitals.

0 About half of the Free Press' Detroit coverage is favorable, both Detroit dailies reported August 14, based on a study commissioned by New Detroit and paid for by the Race Relations Council. Vice President Arthur Johnson, Community • Relations and a Council member, told the Free Press the study "does not bring us to findings to criticize the Free Press." But he added that while the five newspapers examined in the study all treat their cities about the same, the Free Press was among the three lowest. The Detroit News article also quoted Johnson, saying, "I think there is something in it for all the parties concerned." o An August 14 Detroit Free Press story about a contest sponsored by the National Cristina Foundation to find a new positive word to describe disabled people included quotes by Sue Latcha, a volunteer in WSU's Office of Educational Resources for Students with Disabilities. Of the contest's prize, Latcha said, "$50,000 is a nice incentive to come up with a new word, but to me it's not important. People are going to call me whatever comes to mind anyway. We don't need a new word; we need education." o The Black Writers Guild annual autumn conference will take place October 6 at Wayne State University, the August 15 Detroit Free Press reported. • 17

0 An August 15 Detroit Free Press article, which questions the plans of Carolyn • Worthy of Southfield to open a four-year liberal arts college in the Detroit area to serve black students, states, "Since buying the (Shaw College) charter, she has marketed her dream of building a college for black students and built support among such Detroiters as Dalmas Taylor, dean of Wayne State University's College of Liberal Arts; 36th District Judge Wendy Cooley; and Samuel Ajiri, former chairman of the Economic Development Corporation. Taylor, who has advised Worthy on curriculum and faculty matters, said he admires her vision. Ajiri and Cooley could not be reached for comment."

0 The August 16 Grosse Pointe News reported on a recent visit to Czechoslovakia by a team of researchers to advise that country's leaders on environmental concerns. Team members included Professor Ralph Kummler, Chairman, Chemical Engineering; Professor Peter Warner, Occupational and Environmental Health; and Professor Maurice Waters, Political Science.

0 The August 16 Grosse Pointe News carried a photo with caption showing Professor Harold Arnoldi, Music, conducting a summer band program for high school musicians, and an August 21 Oakland Press item listed circulation area residents who participated in the program.

0 An August 17 Detroit Free Press story about Detroit's census count and the city's hope of identifying another 30,000 residents to reach 1 million includes comments by Kurt Metzger, Senior Research Analyst, Michigan· Metropolitan • Information Center - a unit of the Center for Urban Studies and the repository for U.S. Census data in Michigan. Metzger says the ranking of metropolitan areas matters just as much as ranking of cities. The article noted that Detroit's metropolitan area is the nation's sixth largest, with about 4.6 million people according to a census estimate in 1987 and Metzger observes, "That's probably most important. It's not like they drop off the list. You're still going to be one of the top 1O cities. And the metro area will still be among the top metro areas. They will still be looked upon by marketers as a viable market."

0 An August 17 Page 1 Detroit News story about Detroit's census count includes quotes from Mark Neithercut, Director, Michigan Metropolitan Information Center. He said the city has good reason to be optimistic: "If we think the undercount might be at 5 percent and the city's preliminary count is 3 percent under 1 million, then if we were to adjust for the undercount, the city would be over 1 million. The Census (Bureau) has never adjusted for the undercount, but the statistical community feels an adjustment can be done reliably." An August 21 Detroit News story, examining population shifts from industrial cities to suburban areas, again quoted Neithercut, who said, "This is the same trend we're seeing all across the industrial northeast United States, not just in Detroit and the other older cities in Michigan." He said racism, higher taxes, business relocations, crime and increased mobility offered by freeways also have been factors in the • movement away from older cities. 18 o An August 19 Detroit News article examining Detroit Mayor Coleman Young's conversion of campaign funds to a political action committee fund listed some • of the expenditures from that latter fund, including $35,000 for WSU's Department of Af ricana Studies. o President David Adamany is profiled in an August 20 Grain's Detroit Business article titled "90 for the '90s," spotlighting 90 area leaders who are expected to play a role in restoring Detroit's base in the decade ahead. o Professor John Beard, Marketing, and Office Assistant Vallorie Parks, Provost's Office, were quoted in an August 21 Detroit Free Press article examining the impact of over-used words and cliches in written business communications. Beard discourages frequent usage of such words but notes, "Certain words illustrate a specific.point. What needs to be taken into account is grammar and sensitivity to the reader. People develop negative attitudes when they read letters that sound like they haven't had any thought put into them." Parks asserts, "When letters are sent to faculty that are (riddled) with jargon, it makes it harder for the reader to understand what they are talking about."

0 The Detroit News and Detroit Free Press both carried Page 1 stories August 22 about a study by Professor Timothy Bledsoe, Political Science, on opinions and attitudes of residents in the tri-county area on issues such as local and state governments, public school quality, land use, crime, drugs and other topics. The study compared responses to polls taken in 1954, 1971 and, most recently, in 1990 by the Center for Urban Studies. Bledsoe also was interviewed by a • reporter with the Lansing Bureau of Booth Newspapers, which serves a group of eight papers across Michigan. And the study was the basis of an editorial in the August 24 Detroit Free Press. Results of the study also were widely reported on television and radio (see related entry under Electronic Coverage, August 22).

Electronic Coverage o Professor Ronald Aronson, Lifelong Learning, provided commentary for more than a score of radio stations coast-to-coast June 28 during the visit to Detroit of Nelson Mandela. Aronson, a humanities professor and authority on South Africa, discussed issues related to the man and the country on National Public Radio through a feed from WDET-FM, and did the same locally for WJR-AM.

0 WJBK-TV2 aired a story July 8, printed in The Detroit News the same date, which said U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Detroit, chairman of the Government Operations Committee (GOC), accepted an IBM invitation to attend a May 25 news conference at WSU announcing a $200,000 grant to the College of Education while a GOC subcommittee is investigating charges of fraud and favoritism in IBM contracts with the Navy (see related entry under Print Media Coverage, Loe~ Scene, Ju~ 8). • 19

0 Professor Donald C. Austin, M.D., Neurosurgery, was interviewed by WXYZ­ • TV7 science editor Jerry Hodak for a July 9 segment about a new device worn by patients, including cancer patients, that automatically injects morphine into the spine to relieve pain.

o Professor Walt Ambinder, Education, was interviewed about the effects on 12- and 13-year-olds of listening to obscene lyrics used by some "rap music" groups in a report that aired on WDIV-TV4's evening news July 13.

o WJR-AM and WDET-FM aired reports July 17 about the Summer Academy and Skills Self-Enrichment Program at WSU, a retention program for high-achieving minority students admitted as freshmen for the fall under regular admissions criteria (see related entry under Print Coverage, Local Scene, July 17).

o WDIV-TV4 mentioned Wayne State in a July 20 news report comparing tuition and planned fall term rate increases at various universities.On July 20 and 21, WWJ-AM aired an interview with Distinguished Professor Joseph Grano, Law, about the reversal of some convictions against Oliver North.

0 WWJ-AM morning newscasts July 25 reported Governor James Blanchard praised Wayne State and other public universities that held fall tuition increases to 6.5 percent or less, but criticized three for exceeding that percentage and threatened reduced appropriations.

o Larry Ledebur, Director, Center for Urban Studies, was interviewed about the • effects of "dirty tricks" on political campaign outcomes in a segment WDIV-TV4 aired on its July 25 evening newscast.Professor Leonard Kaplan, Education, explained visual, auditory and experimental teaching aids that K-8 teachers could use to improve performance by teachers and students in a WDIV-TV4 interview that aired August 6.

o WJBK-TV2 reported the results of a 13th Congressional District poll conducted for the station by the Center for Urban Studies on the noon and 4:30 p.m. newscasts August 6.

o Professor Allen Goodman, Chairman, Economics, explained the ripple effect that rising oil prices will have on this country's economy during an interview with Catherine Leahan that WXYZ-TV7 aired on the evening news August 7.

o Larry Ledebur, Director, Center for Urban Studies, was interviewed August 7 by WWJ-AMabout the causes of low voter turnout in the August 7 primary.WBZS­ AM, a news and commentary radio station in Orlando, Florida, conducted "live" interviews with Professor Leon Warshay, Sociology, about the Middle East situation the morning of August 8 and again during the afternoon drive time . • 20 o Professor Aleya Rouchdy, Near Eastern and Asian Studies, discussed the Middle East situation in an interview CNN taped August 10 and broadcast August 13. • Joining her in the interview was her husband, Hani Fakhouri, an anthropology professor at the University of Michigan-Flint. Also, on August 20, Professor Rouchdy discussed the Middle East situation on J.P. McCarthy's "Focus" program on WJR-AM. o Issues related to the 1990 Detroit census were discussed in an interview WJBK-TV2 aired August 13 with Kurt Metzger, Senior Research Analyst, Michigan Metropolitan Information Center (MIMIC) - a unit of the Center for Urban Studies and the repository for U.S. Census data for Michigan. WXYZ-TV7 interviewed MIMIC Director Mark Neithercut on the same subject August 17. o Clinical Professor Emanuel Tanay, Psychiatry, was interviewed by CNN August 15 about the effects on American infants and children of being detained in Kuwait City with their parents.

0 Professor James Sowers, M.D., Internal Medicine, in an interview WJBK-TV2 aired on its August 15 evening newscast and August 16 morning newsbreak, discussed a method WSU researchers have found to predict potential victims of pre-eclampsia, a sometimes life-threatening condition that often occurs among pregnant women. Sowers also was interviewed August 15 by the Michigan News Network, a feeder organization with radio clients across the state (see related entry under Print Coverage, National Scene, August 16). • o President David Adamany discussed Michigan higher education in an appearance on the WJR-AM Warren Pierce program August 21. o Professor Timothy Bledsoe, Political Science, was interviewed live on the August 22 WXYZ-TV7 evening news, discussing his study of opinions and attitudes of residents in the tri-county area on issues such as local and state governments, public school quality, land use, crime, drugs and other topics. The study compared responses to polls taken in 1954, 1971 and, most recently, in 1990 by the Center for Urban Studies. Bledsoe also was interviewed August 21, 22 and 23 for half-hour commentary programs on WCXI-AM, WWWW-FM and WJLB-FM which aired August 26, and for news reports on WWJ-AM, WJR-AM, WDET-FM and Michigan Public Radio (see related entry under Print Coverage, Local Scene, August 22). o Professor Sandra Lyness, Education, was on the August 22 WXYZ-TVevening news in a remote broadcast from her home, discussing the findings of three recent studies of dyslexia and issues related thereto.

0 Marlynn Levin, Coordinator, Merrill-Palmer lnstitute's Work and Family Life Program, discussed the effect on young children of watching televised reports of American military reactions to the Middle East situation in an interview that aired on the WDIV-TV4 evening news August 22. • 21 • Corporate and Foundation Relations o Central Michigan University, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society, released $28,225 to the Department of Geography and Urban Planning as part of the Michigan Geographic Alliance program aimed at enhancing the teaching of geography in the public schools.

o Detroit Area Pre-College Engineering Programs, Inc. (DAPCEP) made a continuing gift of $11,712 in support of a science and math tutorial program for pre-college students from the Detroit school system. The program is administered through the College of Engineering.

o The Detroit Free Press continued its support of the Journalism Institute for Minorities with a contribution of $10,000.

o The Howard Hughes Medical Institute remitted $600,000 (included in the Wayne State University Fund, June 1990 receipt totals) to the Biological Sciences Department completing a $1,200,000 award supporting the improvement of undergraduate science education.

0 The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation continued its support of computer conferencing through Computing and Information Technology by remitting $50,000 of this year's $100,000 award. • o The National Bank of Detroit remitted the final $40,000 payment of a $70,000 grant to the Center for Urban Studies to study lending practices in the city of Detroit.

o The National Endowment for the Arts made a first challenge distribution of $112,500 to the College of Fine, Performing and Communication Arts. These funds were released after the College reported that the first year's challenge commitment of $150,000 had been met.

o The Skillman Foundation awarded a grant of $363,000 over three years to support an Intergenerational Training Program initiated by the Department of Sociology in Liberal Arts. The first installment of $150,000 has been received. The program, which will be implemented with Parents and Children Together (PACT), will integrate senior citizen volunteers as mentors to PACT families at­ risk. New video feedback training will be used to train PACT interns and to improve intervention techniques.

o The Robert H. Tannahill Foundation made its quarterly distribution of $20,865 to the Merrill-Palmer Institute. • 22 o The International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) made their first payment of $134,346 • as part of their long-term commitment to fund the Woodcock expansion of the Walter Reuther Library.

• 23 • Planned Giving o An annual distribution of $5,000 was received from C. Dames Trust designated to the Albert C. Dames Trust Scholarship. The trust presently totals $30,000.

o A gift of $10,000 was received from the Estate of Dora Rizzo designated " ...as an endowment for the Wayne State University School of Medicine Student Financial Aid Loan Fund... " in memory of her husband Dr. Frank Rizzo. "These funds shall be offered exclusively to needy medical students of Italian-American ancestry." This is the first and final distribution.

o A $1,594.92 distribution of trust income was received from the Russell Mclauchlin Trust. The gift is designated to the Russell Mclauchlin Scholarship Fund in Theatre. Trust income presently totals $14,585.60.

o A partial distribution of $4,931.78 was received from the Estate of Netta Dresser Letzer designated to the Harry B. and Netta D. Letzer Research Laboratories for Diseases of the Heart and Internal Medicine, School of Medicine. The bequest presently totals $367,348.31 .

0 A partial distribution of $196,100 was received from the Estate of Margareta Olah to be equally divided between the Hungarian Heritage • Room in the Manoogian building and for the improvement of the atmosphere of the foyer Manoogian. The bequest presently totals $395,320.

o An undesignated partial distribution of $155.93 has been received from the Estate of Anne Bytzko. The bequest presently totals $23,943.73.

o An annual trust distribution of $75,000 has been received from the David Vanover Charitable Trust designated to the WSU Cancer Research Fund, School of Medicine. The trust presently totals $300,000.

o The Office of Planned Giving and the Planned Giving Committee, Wayne State University, is presenting a complimentary two-day Estate Planning Seminar for singles and second marriages (50 and older, alumni/AWS/faculty/ retirees, Michigan residents only/Board of Governors/former WSU Fund Board). The seminar is scheduled September 8 and 15, 1990, 8:30 to 1:00 p.m., McGregor Memorial Conference Center. Registration for the seminar is July 23 through August 24. Space is limited to 150 people. To date, 103 confirmations/registrations have been received.

0 To date, there have been 308 responses to the Financial Strategies newsletter requesting complimentary copies of the report, Your Will and • Other Ways to Transfer Assets. 24 o The Planned Giving Committee met June 29 to formulate preliminary plans for the upcoming September estate planning seminar. The meeting • on August 21 focused on the estate planning seminar and developing strategies for a potential estate planning seminar for the School of Medicine. In addition, Diana Warren, Financial Planner, has renewed her membership. To date the Committee has five renewing members and two new members. A meeting has been scheduled with a potential member, estate attorney, Don L. Rosenberg. o The third quarterly mailing of the Financial Strategies newsletter was mailed July 11 to 398 estate planning professionals. There were four estate attorneys/trust officers added to the mailing, which were identified through known bequests and trusts. o Mrs. Vera Kohn (a living donor) bequeathed $300,000 to Wayne State to establish and fund the Stephen B. and Vera H. Sarasohn Endowed Ph.D. Fellowship in Political Science ("The Sarasohn Fellowship"). The fellowship will provide financial assistance for tuition, fees, textbooks, housing, medical insurance, and other study-related expenses, to a second year, Ph.D., Political Science student.

0 The college of Nursing was named in the Estate of Mildred E. Halvorsen. The gift will be for undesignated use. The amount of the estate is undetermined . •

• 25 • Anthony Wayne Society To date this fiscal year 32 new members have joined the Anthony Wayne Society, the University's highest giving club. The following are the five (5) new individual members that have joined since the last report to the Board:

AMOUNT DESIGNATION NEW INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS:

PLEDGING:

Dr. Carl Dila $10,000 School of Medicine

M.D. '62 Neurological Surgeon

Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Fields $50,000 Bequest and cash gifts to fund a Named Endowed Distinguished Tax Lecture Series, School • of Business Admin. Mrs. Marion B. Lucky $2,550,638 Insurance policy for a Named Scholarship Fund BA '40/Education in memory of her MA '51/Education brother Teacher, Thurston High School

Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Moffat $50,000 Insurance policy for the Undesignated Fund B.S. '76/Business Development Officer, Eastern Michigan University

Dr. and Mrs. Richard Ruzumna $10,000 School of Medicine

M.D. '61 Board of Governors, Alumni • Association, School of Medicine 26 Annual Giving • Annual Giving solicitations resulted in 18,639 donations which produced revenue of $1,566,786.06 between October 1, 1989 and July 31, 1990. The breakdown is:

Type of Appeal Revenue # Gifts

Direct Mail: December Constituent $ 77,441.50 1,200 April Constituent 22,557.00 418 July Constituent 2,122.00 51 Special Mailings: Humanities 14,820.00 251 President's December Appea.11 15,161.00 197 President's Letter to Faculty & Staff 68,661.00 352 University Libraries 2,980.00 68 WDET 56,433.39 1,147 Other2 64,673.00 397

TOTAL Direct Mail $ 324,848.89 4,081

Phonathon: $ 348,663.37 8,541 •

Telemarketing: Education $15,552.00 646 Psychology 540.00 19 Social Work 570.00 27 WDET 38,619.50 936 Medicine 10,655.00 147 Chemistry 5,475.00 147 Business Adm. 3,650.00 124 Art & Art History 3,355.00 104 Biological Sciences 4,415.00 69 English 1,700.00 55 Math 515.00 16 Political Science 225.00 10 Communication Disorders & Sciences 525.00 19 Mortuary Science 800.00 23 Journalism 65.00 3 Other2 825.00 10 TOTAL Telemarketing $87,486.50 2,355 • 27 • Annual Giving (con't)

In-House: Ford Campaign 7 $70,597.25 1256 Ford Campaign 6 40,977.50 620 Detroit Edison Campaign 4 12,226.00 170 General Motors 1,860.00 23 Other 7,807.00 61 TOTAL In-House $ 133,467.75 2,130

TOTAL Annual Giving $ 894,466.51 17,107

Solicitations were also conducted by the Law and Medical Schools. The result of these solicitations are as follows:

Law School 283,836.79 831 Medical School 388,482.76 1,979 • TOTAL ALL PROGRAMS $ 1,566,786.06 19,917

1 Non-alumni individuals 2 Other includes revenue from previous solicitations

• GIP'TS-IN-ICIND

AS REPORTED TO THE WAYNE STATE PUND OFFICE July 1, 1990 through July 31, 1990 ..

DONOR. GIF'r RECIPIENT VALUE

Neural Diagnostics, Inc. Computer with math processor OB-GYN $ 6,000. ..., Various Electronic components, clothing, IMR, PACT 1,415. 00 equipment repair Athletics

Various Books, journals, software Libraries N.V.*

GR.ANDTOTAl: $ 7 ,.t1s •

..-

* No value placed on these items by donors.

MAZ 8/10/90 • • •• 29

WSUFUND GIFT ANDPRIVATE FUNDING SOURCE REPORT

• July 1990

RECEIPTTOTALS(!) July 1990 FYTD1990 July 1989 FYTD1989

,, NUMBEROF GIFTS 2290 35597 2183 34665 DOLLARAMOUNT( 2) . $ 732,922.00 $9,511,593.64 $1,003,075.95 $11,650,815.43

RECEIPTPURPOSES COLLEGE/DEPARTMENT July 1990 FYTD1990 JulY 1989 FYTD1989 UNIVERSITYLIBRARIES $ 220.00 $ 33,271.20 $ 617.00 $ 414,443.79 EDUCATION 3,480.00 91,960.27 6,428.33 98,076.54 LIBERALARTS 200,724.00 1,221,327.54 80,102.98 590,937.35 FINE ARTS 115,689.00 432,678.82 10,734.09 87,680.34 + Theatre 14,121.92 110,476.82 40,236.03 136,055.11 ENGINEERING 63,090.25 968,823.91 265,606.50 1,021,525.97 • MEDICINE 134,479.37 2,220,963.64 264,022.53 1 , 689,010 . 79 + Capital Campaign(3) 0.00 244,820.00 21,250.00 1,453,990.00 LAW 25,340.00 355,031.79 53,747.00 315,740.48 SOCIALWORK 4,801.00 222,563.25 10,065.00 222,471.00 NURSING 3,515.00 105,284.00 2,545.00 41,646.00 BUS. ADM. 20,107.58 350,179.34 14~414.25 333,023.79 PHARMACY 1,250.00 84,198.21 1,650.00 41,485.95 ALLIEDHEALTH PROFES 2,380.00 . 67,938.00 190.00 17,177.00 LIFELONGLEARNING 760.00 73,960.00 705.00 8,671.75 URBLABOR & METRO AF 1,302.50 252,814.78 72,500.00 169,007.50 STUDENTAFFAIRS 2,046.00 153,715.24 28,517.19 355,348.56 + Athletics 4,105.00 40,741.54 455.00 22,308.44 WDET-FM 57,198.22 845,991.09 40,578.01 798,834.12 UNDESIGNATEDGIFTS(4) 4,956.00 353,608.65 9,402.00 1,365,449.62 MISCELLANEOUSGIFTS(5) 73,356.16 1,281,245.55 79,310.04 2,467,931.33

TOTALS I $ 732,922.00 $9,511,593.64 $1,003,075.95 $11,650,815.43 1 Amounts reflect unit structure at the time gifts were made. 2 Includes a11 cash and stock received from corporations, foundations· and individuals. 3 Louis M. Elliman Clinical Research Building . 4 Office of the President. 5 Amount reflects all other Colleges/Departments not listed; • including some gifts waiting for designations to be establishea. - r· ---·-·v-, - ·---- .. ,

College/ Division Summary Report 08/03/90 page: t FROM 10/01 /89 TO 07 /31 /90 i Gift & Private Funding Source Report

INDIVIDUALS ORGANIZATIONS i

I ALUMNI ,oundat,011, Co,oo,et,01111. lllletia,oua IJuncl·A•i••nt oo,., TOTAL ACADEMICUNITS/ PARENTS OTHER aus,nanas o,,_,utlons Consorti&. DEPARTMENTS \ ' UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 24102.00 2025.00 1180.00 805.00 !1171.20 33271.20 i EDUCATION 87497.27 3780.00 11180.00 8!58!5.00 93!50.00 17022.27 LIBERAL ARTS 13!5331. 00 82473.87 1982!57.00 1!58894.87 1900.00 8,Ul71.00 1221327.M FIN! ARTS 79002.!59 !5821!5.07 102804.13 1!52773.8!5 1!5COOO. 00 2!590.00 543199.94 I I ENGINEERING 8!5481. 95 14781.00 !573103.54 225848.00 H8!51.42 988123.11 w I 0 ! IIIEDICINE 731!51!5.75 !598809.34 53!5132.57 48!5875.38 9000.00 104450.90 2485713.14 l' LAW 111325.00 529!58.00 1723!5.00 18821!5. 71 300.00 385031. 71 MORTUARYSCIENCE 3130.00 20.00 9000.00 2235.00 40.00 15129.00 i RES. & GRAD. STUDIES 2120.00 117288. 47 248213.82 178513 .80 187.!SO 54!5001.11 HLTH & PHYS EDUC 4413.00 200.00 200.00 12!5.00 4131.00 SOCIAL VQRK 282 t'7. 2!5 4840.00 184041.00 22082.00 9383.00 222583.29 I MJRSING 31023.00 211!59.00 745.00 !5225.00 58-432.00 109284.00 BUS. ADM. 15925.28 113387. 33 81227.75 !11489 .00 110.00 350179.34 PHARMACY 28952.49 2013.00 4747.00 3195!L 72 11530.00 l41H.21 ALLIED HEALTHPR0FES 47993.00 800.00 310.00 3580.00 350.00 92113.00 LIFELONG LEARNING

Only gifts ,. to the Development Office appe this report . 'lllM CSC I P'I 1117111• • •• ., •• College/ Division Summary Report • 08/03/90 page: FROM 10/01/89• TO 07/31/90 Gift & Private Funding Source Report

INDIVIDUALS ORGANIZATIONS

Corl)Ol11t1ons. Rell9iou1 Fund•Rei11n9 ALUMNI PARENTS QTMER Foundatoont o,..., TOTAL ACADEMIC UNITS/ Sus,nesses Or9an1u11on1 Con,orll•· i 0EP ARTMENTS - '. SEN. Y.P. & PROVOST 1!55.00 4819.51 175050.00 9900.00 110424.91 AOMIN& ,XNANCE 2201.00 185.00 3088.00 l'AC. PLAN. & MANAGE 144. 00 144.00 PUBLIC SAFETY 10.00 120.00 10.00 500.00 1140.00 UNIVERSITYPRESS 2450.00 3875.00 400.00 4650.00 11379 .00 w UR8 LABOR& METROAF 795.00 455.00 83782.91 17!5711 .17 12000.00 252114.71 - .. FISCAL OPERATIONS 32!5.00 2718 .87 29!5.00 470.00 150.00 4021.117 UNIVERSITYRELATIONS 100525.35 715097.11 193349.00 112174. 57 170.00 80.00 31080.94 1222437.27

STUDENTAFFAIRS 111739. 0!5 24337.25 17315.00 28688.00 10.00 7311.41 114458.71 ! -

.

Only gifts reported lo the Development Office ac>oear on this te(lort

,o,,,..i:sc I,, ZI I lf84 Wayne State University 08/03/90 page: 13 Detail Total from 10/01/89 to 07/31/90 Gift & Private Funding Source Report

Part I: CURRENT OPERATIONS

INDIVIDUALS ORGANIZATIONS SOURCE Corpor •• ions, Religious Funcl·Reislng ALUMNI PARENTS OTHER Foundations Other TOTAL DONOR l!lusi-sses Organizations Conaortle PURPOSES 1. Unrestricted 84738.29 59380.88 15561.00 32918.00 1745.00 174340.9!

2. Academic Divisions 844114.88 427408.00 201801.25 410187.85 1800.00 88308. 115 1182108.13 3. Faculty and Slaff Compensation 4. Rese•ch 401117.81 229723.09 385150.57 517781.58 13400.00 184H81. Ol!I 5. Public Service and 484187.82 35726.13 2563.00 14126.50 45133.50 !582537 .S! w Extension N 6. Libr-v 2220.00 1045.00 127.50 1702.50 18921.20 22024.2(1 7. Operation and Maintenance 230.00 75.00 125000.00 125305.0C of Physical Pl-,t 8. Student Financial Aid 86200.13 121310.41 181148 .13 188500.51 31327.25 598487.2~

9. Other Restricted Purposes 110948.13 484458.31 880743.00 244050.43 170.00 80.00 720088.18 2520418.83

1 O. Restricted Clines 2 -9) 1521152.75 1278148.31 2208788.07 1455157.80 1770.00 80.00 1351815.08 7407817.11 11. Total - Current 1593881.04 1338326.17 2222327.07 1488875.80 1770.00 eo.oo 138910.08 7582158. I~ Operations

Part II: CAPITAL <·

12. Property. Buildings, 10231.00 241212.00 183100.00 211171.04 5000.00 35500.00 755014.0.- and Equipment 13. Endowment and Simil• Funds: Unrestricted Income 14. Endowment and Simil• 89755.88 438985.73 180247.45 184752.81 150010.00 !5830.00 10117381.e, Funds: Restricted Income 15. Loan Funds 18313.31 8138.00 2480.00 825.00 1504.88 117038.11

16. Total - Cac,ital 208299.11 614333.73 345807.45 477348.85 155010.00 50834.88 1821434. 7(

17. Grand Total (lines 11 + 16) 1800189.03 2032680.70 2588134.52 1988224.85 1770.00 155070.00 987544.74 1511513.~

Only gif.orted lo the Development Office on this report • •• • • •• 08/09/90 LIST OF INOIV. DONORSGIVING Si000.00 OR MOREFROM 07/01/90 TO 07/31/90 PAGE: t ·----··············-----············------·······------·RECEIPT GI FT GI FT NAME DESIGNATION AMOUNT Or.------·------·········------Charla M. 81acker•Eggleston ------·----·······------··········-----·FACULTYRESEARCH EQUIPMENT FUND ·---·------·$1,000.00 Ramanlal M. Golwala, M.o. AL~'

Richard 8 reh I er ,SOCIAL WORK s1,,01.oo

Russell McLauchl in Trust Fund RUSSELLMCLAUCHLIN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND FOR THE TREATRE $1,594.92 ~

Sidney Fields SIDNEY FIELDS DISTINGUISHEDTAX LECTURE SERIES $2,000.00

Ms. Florence Booth OFFICE OF THE DEAN• SOCIALWORK IMPROVEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT S2,5oo.oo Sylvia M. Kosciolek, M.D. WILHELMINEHALEY EXPENDABLE TRUST FUND·•BIOLOCY S2,500.00

Estate or Netta Dresser Leezer GIFTS FROMTHE ESTATEOF NETTADRESSER LETZER••MEDICINE $4,931.78 w w Mrs. Flora Hodgman Temple RHEUMATOLOCYRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT $5,000.00

Estate or Dora Rizzo MEDICINE s,0,000.00

Ms. Carol A. Osborne CHARLESV. HAMMONDMEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUNO••LAW s20,ooo.oo

David Vanover Charitable Trust DAVID VANOVERTRUST GIFT TO MEDICINE. $75,000.00 08/09/90 LIST OF CORPORATIONSGIVING $1000.00 OR MOREFROM 07/01/90 TO 07/31/90 PACE: 1

--·------·······------············------·RECEIPT 01n GIFT NAME DESIGNATION Af40UNT ------······------·------· ·------. Alexander Hamilton Lire Insurance Company WOE T PUBLIC RADIO $1,000.00 Ann Arbor Summer Festiva I, Inc. W DE T PUBLIC RADIO $1,000.00 AT&T Communications W DE T PUBLIC RADIO $1,000.00 Carl Di la, H.O., P.C. MEDICINE-OFFICEOF THE DEAN• ALUMNIDEVELOPMENT FUND s,,000.00 Car I E. Marusak, M.0. , I nc. MEDICINE-OFFICE OF THE DEAN • ALUMNIDEVELOPMENT FUND $1,000.00 Chene Park Enterprises, A Michigan Co-Partnership W DE T PUBLIC RADIO $1,000.00 Chrysler Corporation RICHARDH. AUSTINFUND FOR EXCELLENCEIN ACCOUNTING•MINORITY S $1,000.00 Courage COMMUNITYPREVENTION (PROJECT EPIC)• VARIOUS . s,.000.00 Federal-Mogul Corporation GEORGER. HUSBANDMEMORIAL FUND s,,ooo.Do Prism Productions, 1ncorpor3:ed WOE T PUBLIC RADIO $1,000.00 St. John Hospital and ~eoic31 center ST. JOHN HOSPITALRESEARCH SUPPORT $1,000.00 The Attic Theatre W DE T PUBLIC RADIO s,,000.00

Bredhorr & Kaiser NAT WEINBERGMEMORIAL FUND $1,100.00

General Motors Corporation GENERALMOTORS STEP PROGRAM $1,200.00 w .z:: Berna rd Freid, Attorney GLADYSFREID SCHOLARSHIP $1,500.00

General Motors Corporation GENERALMOTORS STEP PROGRAM $1,600.DO

Michigan Physicians Mutual Liabi I ity Company INTERSTITIAL FLUID RESEARCH $1,900.DO

The University or Michigan WOE T PUBLIC RADIO $2,250.00

Hannony House Records~ Tapes, Incorporated W O E T PUBLIC RADIO $2,762.50

American Fracture Assn. -MEDICINE $3,000.00

Detroit An,a Pre-College Engineering Program. Inc. DACEP PROGRAM $3,050.25

Research Foundation or The National Council NATIONALCOUNCIL OF TEACHERSOF ENGLISH EVIDENTIALS• EPISTEMOLO $3,850.00 • • •• • • .- 08/09/90 LIST OF CORPORATIONSGIVING S1000.00 OR MOREFROM 07/01/90 TO 07/31/90 PACE: 2 ------···················------··········-······------·RECEIPT GI FT Cl FT HAHE OESICNATION AMOUNT ------···············------Unisys Corporation UNISYS CORPORATION-SUMMERTRAINING AND EDUCATIONPROGRAM (STEP) $5,000.00

Bayer, Bess, VandeNa rker WOE T PUBLIC RAOIO $6,375.00

Manufacturers Bank BUSINESS ~OMINISTRATIONSCHOLARSHIPS $7,500.00

~ Laboratory For Educ. and Research in ~euroscience NEUROLOGY• GENERALRESEARCH ANO DEVELOPMENT. $10,800.00

Lumigen, Inc. CHE~ISTRY • GENERALRESEARCH ANO DEVELOPMENTFUND $20,000.00

Detroit Edison Company ENGINEERING $50,000.00

National Endo~ment For The Arts EARLY IDE:NTIFICATIONOF TALENTENDOWMENT FUND• NEA CHALLENGEGR s,,2,,00.00 w U1 08/09/90 LIST OF FOUNDATIONSGIVINO $1000.00 OR MOREFROM 07/01/90 TO 07/31/90 PAGE: ·······4--·------·------·-·------·---·-----····------··RECEIPT GI FT GI FT NAME DESIGNATION AMOUNT ------·········-···········------·------·------·········------· Ford Motor Company Fund W O E T PUBLIC RADIO • $1,000.00

The Fund for Medical Research and Education FACULTYRESEARCH EQUIPME~T FUND $2,100.00

The L.yon Foundation, Inc, W O E T PUBLIC RADIO S3,000.00 > Ford Motor Company Fund FORD MOTORCOMPANY PRESIDE~TIAL YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD MATCH S7, 500.00

Robert H. Tannahi I I Foundation TANNAHILLFOUNDATION-MERRILL PALMER INST FOR FAMILY 520,856.16

Charles Ste~art Mott Foundation CHARLESSTEWART MOTT FOUNDATION COMPUTERCONFERENCINC PROJECT $50,000.00

The Ski I Iman Foundation THE SKllL~AN FOUNDATIONSKILLMAN INTERGENERATIONAL TRAINING s,50,000.00 w a,

• • •~