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Page 29 text:
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Admissions initiates attractive programs The prospective student, whether he be a fresh high school graduate or a middle-aged housewife, makes his first contact with the University through the Department of Admissions. Not satisfied with sitting back and waiting for stud- ents to come to him, however, James T. Mansfield, director of Admissions, has initiated three new pro- grams this year to help more students enter U-D. Project 100 aids 100 inner-city students and guides them in a course of studies. This project is being financed by a Holden Foundation Grant. Instituted in relation with Project 100 is Project 50-BA. This program is aimed at orienting 50 inner- city Negro students to the College of Business Admin- istration. The third program is the Independent College Opportunity Program CICOP5, financed through a Kellogg Foundation Grant. ICOP is directed at help- ing ll inner-city students annually. The program is supplemented by state and federal funds. t x. 'Qs t, ,,, r .
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Page 28 text:
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xwxxxwdm WMM QNNWN-Y. . Xl s, ' 1 . . .1 ANHSYIWN Tlze Admissions Office recruits new students. ABOVE A participant in Project 100, initiated by Admissions, goes over a text before class. ABOVE RIGHT James T. Mansfield directs entire admission procedure. RIGHT Fred McEvoy, assistant director of admissions, gives information to prospective students via the phone. 'wu- xx if ' A' X X
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Page 30 text:
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Student can hear self a Counseling Cen er Moving from Petoskey to the Administration Building, the Psych Center is now located in Room 220. The sign on the door reads Uni- versity Counseling Center, indicating the new atmosphere of the office. Under the direction of Thomas Davis and Alex Costinew, the Center is more than a place for the storage of con- fidential files and vocational tests. It is a place where a student can hear himself think. As Costinew explains, f'It is a place where the student can come up with facts, take all these facts, put them together and then hear the ideasf' Formality is good for professional- ism, but the personnel at the Counseling Center relate to the students as people, not as numbers. Although the Psych Center is functioning under new surroundings, the Health Center still operates on Petoskey. Under the direction of John Shuey, M.D., the Health Center pro- vides on-campus medical service for dormies, as well as day hops. 26
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