/ CREEM MAGAZINE PRESENTS THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND ONE TIME second front page Z .i P £Iwirl it~rn Datili NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, May 16, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan PagThree Sem ate investiga tespos ible Medicaidfraad FRIDAY, MAY 16 8:.30 P .M. FORD AUDITORIUM, DETROIT TICKS $4.50/$5.50. Available at Discount Records, Ann Ar- bor; Huidsons; Ginnel's; Mixed Media, Detroi t;or at the door. Dig it. I ,MILITARY SPENDING' A public forum with: CONGR SAN ESCH Sponsored by: Ecumenical Campus Center 'Interfaith Council for Peace FRIDAY May 16 8 P.M1 First Presb yterian Church l WASHINGTON (Iom-Senate inves- tigators digging into the medicaid pro- gram say they have turned up evidence of scandals that could run into hun- dreds of millions of dollars. The probe is centered on inflated fees and possible fraud involving, doc- tors, dentists, druggists, nursing homes and other medical services. "I'm finding it much worse than I ever dreamed of," said Sen. John J. Williams (R-Del), who is spearheading the Senate Finance Committee's in- vestigation. Williams cited cases of a nursing home accused of charging for dead patients, of alleged phony billings by pharmacists, of giveaway lures by an unnamed dentist to bring in more wel- fare patients. The Finance Committee has zeroed in on possible scandals in New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Baltimore, Chi- cago and Appalachia in the coast-to- coast probe. One investigator said the losses through abuses in the $5-billion, 38- state program of free health care for welfare recipients and other poor patients could total hundreds of mil- lions of dollars. The committee's staff is expected to deliver its detailed report to the Senate panel early in June as a pi'elude to public hearings this summer. The investigators have asked state officials to supply names of all doc- tors and dentists receiving more than $25,000 a year from medicaid and the separate medicare program for the aged. The list is running into the thousands. One practitioner in New York City has collected almost $500,000 so far, records show. A doctor in the South has received almost $300,000. Williams said the programs were meant to pay doctors for cases that had been charity in the past. But he add- ed, "We didn't intend for it to be a bonanza or a gold mine." An independent check by The As- sociated Press of medicaid programs in half a dozen states found: -In New York, a dentist running a clinic in the East Harlem slums, Dr. Fred Fisher, has been accused in court records of turning in "fraudulent and untrue invoices" for medicaid pay- ments. Records show Fisher received $402,975 from medicaid over the past two years. -New York officials say they are asking refund of an estimated $100,000 from a group of podiatrists which the city said was taking foot X-rays of every patient who came in the door. -A grand jury in Baltimore has in- dicted 13 persons-nine doctors, a den- tist, two pharmacists and an accoun- tant-on fraud conspiracy charges after a lengthy investigation of one small drugstore which topped Mary- land's list of medicaid payments with $245,497 for prescriptions last year. -Maryland's attorney general an- nounced investigation this week of another possible fraud involving a dentist and a Baltimore druggist who, officials said, turned in one batch of 2,000 billings, all for the same five drugs. -In Kentucky, a tiny pharmacy in the small mountain town of Neon fill- ed medicaid prescriptions totaling $328,290 last year--roughly 33 times what the owner estimated his volume would be without the government pro- gram. State investigators found many Appalachia families were getting cost- ly doctors' prescriptions for common colds.r r-A nursing home near Sacramento, Calif, the Rancho Cordova Convales- cent Hospital, has been accused in Medi-Cal suspension proceedings of billing for patients after their death. -One Los Angeles dentist is accused of using silver inlays while billing the state for gold at a profit of $60 per patient. Sen. Williams said there are glaring cases of abuses in every area of med- ical care under investigation by the committee. "We're not going to led it go un- noticed or unchallenged," he added. "It's not fair to the other hard-work- ing doctors." Key senators are determined to slow the rocketing costs of medicaid by re- pealing in the next few weeks the requirement that all states make steady progress toward a full program of comprehensive health care for the poor by 1975. The Nixon administration has an- nounced plans to try to trim medicaid costs to forestall a predicted $2-bil- lion jump in the program's costs for the next fiscal year. Even with the cuts, the increase is pegged at almost $1 billion, boosting the bill for medic- aid next year to $5 billion. I I . I TONIGHT and SATURDAY SARA 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. Has appeared in joint concerts with: Jean Ritchie Norman Kennedy "Sara Grey is one of the best tra- ditional singers and performers I. have ever heard. She is a joy to listen to."-Bob White GREY Has appeared at: University of Pennsylvania Temple University Goddard Colby Swarthmore Villanova Cafe Lena (Saratoga) Gerdes Folk City (N.Y.) 2nd Fret (Philadelphia) Back Door (York) Etc. SATURDAY-1 P.M.-FOLK WORKSHOP featuring SARA GREY NEW YORK TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER BG, VTFR the news today, by The Associated Press and College Press Service THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION has issued a warning that it would ban cigarette advertising from radio and television networks if Congress does not extend its prohibition against regulation of advertising imposed in 1965. Despite the possibility of a government ban after June 30, cigar- ette companies are buying network television advertising time for next season at an undiminished rate. Advertising agencies representing the cigarette companies have declined to comment on the purchase which account for 10 per cent of the network's and station's income. * * * * THE MALAYSIAN PRIME MINISTER, Tunku Abdul Rah- man, accused the Red Chinese of fomenting racial strife in Malaysia and announced a national defense mobilization to con- trol the violence. For the third day, Malays and Chineses fought in the streets with guns, knives and spears. The rioting broke out after Rahman's ruling Alliance party suf- fered a setback Saturday in parliamentary elections and emerged with only a slight majority. The Malaysian Chinese Association, a partner in the Alliance coalition, was the heaviest loser and announced it would no longer take part in the government. This angered Chinese who feared an all-Malay government. In his address to the nation Rahman said the Chinese Com- munists sent money into Malaysia to, spread racial strife and to disrupt the elections. *' *~ * * NIKE-HERCULES FIRING SITES in four states will be abandoned next year, the Army announced Wednesday. Affected by the move are two Michigan sites at Detroit and Carleton. Other Nike bases in Michigan will remain at Metropolitan airport, Union Lake, and Utica. Other sites to be closed are located in Milwaukee, Wis., Warring- ton, Pa., and Felicity, Ohio. The move is expected to save the Army $3.6 million a year. The Nike Hercules missile carries an atomic warhead for use against enemy bombers. The sites were installed in 1958. SENATOR EDWARD M. KENNEDY, (D-Mass), urged mod- erate students to play a greater role in their universities and col- iges in order to offset campus extremists. Kennedy, speaking before a luncheon of the NAACP Defense and Educational Fund, said student militants are going to provoke "re- actionary repression." As for the universities, Kennedy added, "They must recognize that they have serious shortcomings, and they must initiate ac- celerated reforms to provide an alternative route toward change be- sides the confrontation politics of militants." A Waif, a Lesbian and Candidates air education goals an Architect -Associated Press Policeman grabs protester during confrontation Poli ce use tear gas, guns to end protest S Continued from Page 1) sify as smart can learn just as much from the 'dumb' ones as the 'dumb' ones can learn from the smart ones," she claimed. Mrs. Schoultz said most atypical children fail because "we force a single standard of achievement on all children." "Literaoy is a thing of the past," she said, "and in a school system that is based on a standard of literacy some it is the best way to learn." "Communication is what is-im- portant," she added, "and there are forms of communication other than reading and writing. The way schools are run now, teach- ers try to keep a quiet classroom, but talking is communicating and it is the best way to learn. Henry Johnson, director of group care and counseling at the W. J. ' Maxey Boys Training. School in Whitmore Lake, said all children have a right to educa- tion, and the school system has an obligation to see that each child achieves his maximum potential. Ann Arbor's classes for "Type A" and "'Type B" children are dangerous because children are often classified incorrectly, he, said. "Once a child is put in a class below his level, he has lost his opportunity to achieve his full potential," Johnson explained.. Johnson : blasted the proposed budget allocation for special edu- cation as "totally inadequate" and "a pitance." "Much more needs to be done soon," he said. Candidate Ivan Kemp's plat- form called for a "strict definition of learning." That way, he main- tained, "the teacher would know exactly what he is, expected to teach, and the child would know just what he has to learn." Kemp said the elected repre- sentatives on the schodl board: must be held accountable for es- tablishing a system of education that will "prepare children for a society that has literacy as its basis. "Schools are not instruments of change," he said, "but they should be stablizing factors." Kemp said, "I believe it is necessary to protect the children from propaganda and other outside influences." Kemp said that the proposed budget was adequate, and that all the present programs could be kept by increasing the size of the classes. Gottlieb agreed with Kemp, saying "fifty children in a class is comfortable if the teacher is good." Regents to nam ne NR'-dean At their meeting today the Re- gents are scheduled to hear a pro- posal from a search committee asking them to designate Prof. Stephen B. Preston as acting dean of the natural resources school. Preston would replace R. Keith Arnold who will leave the school June 15 to become Deputy Chief for Research in the U.S. Forest Service. The meeting will be held at 11 a.m. in the Administration Bldg. The Regents will also be asked to appoint history Prof. Sidney Fine as icting chairman of the history department. A bylaw to officially establish the library science school will be considered and a statement de- scribing reasons for the phasing out of University school will be released. The Regents voted to close the school at their May 2 meeting. The Regents also will appoint an alumni member to the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athle- tics to replace Darring Hunting of Grand Rapids. (Continued from Page 1) As officers broke up the main body, hundreds fled to the nearby Student Union Building. Tear gas drove them out. Four officers try- ing to make an arrest in Sproul Plaza near the campus adminis- tration center were forced to re- treat under a shower of missiles. Some hit by birdshot were youths throwing rocks from roof- tops, police said. Others were non- participants. An elderly woman suffered facial cuts when fleeing demonstrators trampled her. Gov. Reagan in Sacramento called the park protest "phony issue . .. seized upon as an excuse for a riot. The police found stakes, bamboo poles, rocks and bricks on, the property. Someone must have had in mind some kind of dis- turbance." Reagan said he had heard "The leader of the demonstration was the president-elect of the student body at Berkeley for next year, which I think indicates something about the kind of representation they're offering." Ignoring university intentions to build an athletic complex on the one-third of a block, Tele- graph Avenue h a b i t u e s had scrounged tools and materials sev- eral weeks ago and started build- ing. Chabrol Offers Menage in Les Biches' by RENATA ADLER "LET BICHES," is Claude Chabrol's b e s t movie since "The Cousins." "Les Biches," which means "The Does," concerns a rich les- bian (Stephane A u d r a n) who picks up an aging, un- formed w a i f (Jacqueline, Sassard), who earns her liv- ing chalking does on the sidewalks of Paris. The two go off to Miss Audran's house in Saint Tropez, which already contains two vicious far out, free-loading homo- sexuals--one of whom looks very like Jean Genet. When Jean-Louis Trintignant, as a young architect, sleeps, first with the waif and then, on a more permanent basis, with the lesbian, he remarks that the menage seems to him a little strange. The movie is very funny in parts-Miss Audran has a fine, drawing -room - comedy sarcastic way with a line. What is extraordinary is the portrayalof a kind of devi- ate Dolce Vita, in which the waif, comes to regard her former lovers, male and fe- male, as parental figures, to whom she becomes quite filially attached. She suffers a Freudian Finnegans Wake kind of trauma when she ob- serves them in bed together, and subsequently goes on an Elektra kind of mad. It 'is post Freud, for those waifs who have no emotional past in the conventional sense. I have never seen this sort of waif-portrayed before. The colors at the begin- ning of the movie are muted and washed, like scrolls, for the odd feminine milieu that is introduced. The ending seemed to me loosely done- it does not quite take, dra- matically-but the music, by Pierre Jansen, is painstak- ingly appropriate. And for the lesbian watchers-who, on the basis of the reception of "Therese and Isabel," seems to be a substantial and growing public-this is a movie that they can see with people who just like Chabrol and films. Times -Friday 9:30 M S -Sunday E k:40- 9:15 rtlCTIOHSO UN D.,A at FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9 p.m. $1.00 MAY 16-17 having fun and making merry OLOR FRI DAY and SATURDAY, May 16,17 THE ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE ! t REMEMBER !! Saturday Matinees still only $1.00 until 5:30 P.M. I Itl lt