'SUMMER WEEKEND': STUDENT ACTIVISM See Editorial Page LY Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom 471, att WARMER High--84 Low-45 Partly cloudy with a few showers VOL. LXXVI, No. 18S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1966 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Population Ex plosion Spurs Medical Research EDITOR'S NOTE: As the world's population mounts, scientists in laboratories in the United States and abroad are engaged in a des- perate search for an effective, safe and cheap contraceptive. Much headway has been made but many obstacles, among them religious and cultural ones, stand in the way. Here is an up to date report. CHICAGO (P)-The world's pop- ulation explosion has set off an explosive counteraction in medi- cal research. The work is part of a broad long-range effort to help control the mushrooming world population before it brings widespread famine and wrecks world peace. The goal is to find a variety of means of conception controls that are effective, safe, cheap enough to be feasible in impoverished areas or countries, simple enough to encourage widespread use, and suited to the religious and cultural requirements of the users. Although research covers half a dozen radically different ap- proaches, many scientists and pop- ulation experts believe effective methods for accomplishing the task already are at hand. They estimate between five and seven million American women have had virtually 100 per cent hormonal mixtures or combina- tions of astrogen and progestogen --a synthetic progesterone - and are believed to prevent the female egg, or ovum, from leaving the ovaries to become fertilized. Another estimated 250,000 to 500,000 American women are using intrauterine devices-steel rings or plastic loops, spirals or bows that a doctor inserts into the uterus under sterile conditions. With the same goal, prelimin- ary research is being pressed on: 1-A "morning after" contracep- tive pill that has been effective in early trials up to six days after sexual intercourse. Drs. John M. Morris and Ger- trude Van Wegenen of the Yale University School of Medicine are experimenting with several com- pounds that prevent the female egg from implanting in the womb after it is fertilized by the male sperm cell. Implantation normal- ly does not occur until the sixth or seventh days after the egg is fertilized. 2-Antifertility pills and injec- tions taken only by the male. Drs. Warren 0. Nelson of Albany Medical College, John MacLeod of Cornell University Medical College in males lasting about a month. Other compounds tried on con- vict-volunteers at Oklahoma and Oregon penitentiaries successfully suppressed the sperm count. However, researchers say these agents are several years away from general use and have been marked by such occasional side effects as nausea and dimunition .of the sexual drive. 3-Temporary sterility produc- ed either in the male or female as an allergic reaction to a sub- stance extracted from sperm. One investigator in this field, Dr. Seymour Katsh, professor of pharmacology at the University of Colorado Medical School in Denver, has inducted sterility con- sistently in male guinea pigs with a single injection into the blood- stream of an antigen extractedl from sperm. The sterility disap- pears in six to eight months but can be maintained indefinitely by periodic immunizations. When female guinea pigs are in- jected with the substance they de- velop antibodies to sperm that keep them sterile for a year or longer. 4-Use of hormones to effective- ly regulate the menstrual cycles so that the rhythm method be- comes fully reliable. On the matter of cost, the price of a month supply of the oral contraceptive pill has dropped from $13.50 to from $2.20 to $2.50 planning and making funds avail- in the last decade and the amount able to state and local agencies of the dose has been trimmed to that elect to carry on such pro- one-tenth that originally used, grams. The intrauterine devices cost Dr. Morris of Yale, who is work- about $2 each in the United States ing with the "retroactive" pill, and may be used indefinitely un- said, "we have yet to find the til pregnancy is desired. ideal pill." The fertility rate has been in a He said he questions whether general decline in the United the Roman Catholic Church would States since 1957 but still is well approve the principle involved in above the period just before World his pill, where the fertilized egg War II. dies without implantation. Prof. David M. Heer, a popula- Some other religions, he. added, tion expert at the Harvard School make a distinction between biolog- of Public Health in Boston, said ical life and human life, looking there have been no scientific stud- upon a fertilized human egg as les to determine the impact of The the former and a growing embryo Pill on the declining U.S. birth after implantation as the latter. rate but offered this opinion: "But the Catholic Church has "Half of this drop was expected accepted the rhythm method and and I'm sure The Pill had a great there is some belief that the deal to do with the other half." Church ultimately will accept pills Numerous governments and or- that prevent ovulation-as an ex- ganizations are working in the tension of rhythm," he added. field of world population control. Dr. Alan F. Guttmacher of New The International Planned Par- York, president of Planned Par- enthood Federation, with strong enthood-World Population, be- financial backing from Planned lieves no single type of contracep- Parenthood in the United States, tion will find universal applica- is conducting programs in 39 coun- tion. tries. The Ford Foundation and "We need a multiplicity of means the Population Council, Inc., are so that couples can choose the active on the same front. method best suited to their per- The U.S. Department of Health, sonal, religious and cultural re- Education and Welfare has an- quirements," he said. nounced a policy of conducting Dr. John Rock of Harvard Uni- and supporting programs of basic versity,. codiscoverer of the oral and applied research on family antiovulation pills and himself a Roman Catholic, contends the pills act in a "natural" manner to pre- vent conception by "putting the ovaries in a state of repose." , Dr. James H. Beaton of Grand Rapids, Mich., an obstetrician- gynecologist of Roman Catholic faith, said he prescribes the pills for his Catholic patients if they already have children and suffer from irregular cycles. He added: "Unlike Dr. Rock, our interest is not to block ovulation. Instead we are using hormones to more close- ly simulate a normal cycle so that rhythm can be used effectively. We may or may not be suppressing ovulation. When anyone asks, I tell them that in truth I don't know, because it would take spe- cial tests to determine this. But this is really beside the point. The important thing is intent of use. These women take The Pill to reg- ulate their cycle." Dr. Beaton said there is no con- flict with Church doctrine "the way I'm doing it." The Ecumenical Council of the Roman Catholic Church reiter- ated at its closing sessions that the doctrine of rhythm remains the only permissible methods of birth control for Catholics. How safe are the oral contra- ceptives? Medical literature contains the records of numerous clinical trials and studies that have adjudged the pills safe and effective, But some investigators have questioned whether long-time use of oral contraceptives would tend to produce such serious side ef-' -fects as blood clots in the legs, long-lasting sterility, or suscepti- bility to cancer. However, the pioneers in clini- cal studies of the drug, Dr. Rock of Harvard and Gregory Pincus, Sc.D. of the Worcester Foundation forj Experimental Biology, Shrewsbury, Mass., say their long-term fol- low-up studies have failed to bear this out. Pincus said his studies indicate the pills are "safe, effective and reversible" and that their long- term use "certainly does not sug- gest carcinogenic cancer causing potential, and certain evidence might even be considered as indi- cating an inhibiting effect." A report of the World Health Organization scientific g r o u p, which contains the collective views of an international group of ex- perts, recently issued these gen- eral conclusions on the safety of the pill: "Laboratory studies of users of oral contraceptives have revealed a number of deviations from. es- tablished norms, but few, if any, of these appear to have pathologi- cal significance. "Serious adverse experiences of various kinds, such as thrombo- embolic phenomena blood clots, have been reported in users of oral contraceptives, but no cause- and-effect relationship has been established either by available sta- tistics or by experimental evidence. "It should also be noted that, despite obvious merits of current- ly available oral agents, they should be considered merely as the first step toward even more gen- erally useful methods of fertility control." With all the new means being developed, is population control possible? Dr. Philip M. Hauser, professor of sociology at the University of Chicago and director of the uni- versity's population research and training center, gave this reply: "For the economically advanc- ed areas of the world the answer is 'Yes.' For the leveloping na- tions, which now contain two- thirds of the world's population, the answer is 'We don't know.' "But there is one thing we do know. We cannot afford not to exert every possible effort to help the 'developing nations to control their birth rates. Never before in history have professions been con- fronted by as significant and de- manding a task as now confronts the biochemical and social science personnel on the family-planning battlefront." success in their planned parent- and Carl Heller of Oregon Medi- hood efforts by taking The Pill, cal School have worked with these an oral contraceptive under study compounds. in women since 1954. Nelson said a single oral does These birth control pills contain has induced a period of infertility HIGH WAR LOSSES: Buddhist Rebels Revolt, Destroy U.S. Building SAIGON (Pi-Riot police firediU.S. Information Service building Several hours later, 500 battle- tear gas Friday to break up a in Hue. equipped soldiers making up one demonstration by 30 to 40 Bud- About 200 screaming students of the 1st Division's battalions dhist monks protesting the mili- smashed windows of the modern, were trucked into the city to es- tary regime of Premier Nguyen two-story building, unoccupied at tablish guard at the U.S. consu- Cao Ky. the time, and surged in to loot late and other American facilities, Quick action prevented one of and burn books, films, shelves, including a relay station of the the monks from possibly burning and desks in support of the Bud- Voice of America. himself to death and heavily arm- dhist campaign for quick restora- Dominating other news of the ed troops kept demonstrators tion of civilian rule. day was an announcement of the away from the U.S. Embassy. The building had been battered U.S. Command that American Ky planned to fly to Da Nang, and smoked up in a similar po- casualties last week were the high- where forces loyal to him crushed litically motivated attack Jan. 23, est in the war. With more battal- Buddhist rebels earlier this week, 1965. At that time, the Buddhist lions than ever before in the field, and take personal charge of end- hierarchy was crying against a they totalled 966 against the pre- ing the northern rebillion against civilian regime, the government vious high of 710 in the third his government, of Premier Tran Van Huong. week of last November, the period This rebellion had an anti- American officials estimated of the Ia Drang Valley battle. American character and rioters they destroyed 90 per cent of the There was a difference, how- yesterday burned and sacked the library and its equipment. ever, in that 146 were killed last MONKS IN FUNERAL PROCESSION C NEWS WIRE MAYOR JEROME P. CAVANAGH of Detroit, candidate for the Democratic nomination to the U.S. Senate, will speak at 8 p.m. tonight in the Ann Arbor Community Center. His public appearance is sponsored by the local branch of the Council for Democratic Directions. MICHIGAN'S JULY DRAFT CALL will jump by nearly a third over the June call, State Selective Service headquarters said today. The July quota is 2,225 men. In June 1,675 men are to be called. The increase is in line with the national increase for July. The state director, Col. Arthur Holmes, said local draft boards have been instducted to review all college student deferments, particularly to weed out part-time students from the deferred list and to begin using national draft test scores and college ranking information, soon to be furnished. SIX DEMOCRATIC SENATORS have called for a Congres- sional study of alternatives to the present military draft. They asked that the study include such alternatives as the peace corps. -week while 820 were wounded.. There was a narrower ratio in the seven days of mid-November-240 killed and 470 wounded. Losses among both the allies and the Viet Cong exceeded those of May 8-14. Of ground operations, a spokes- man reported "no significant con- tact." B52 bombers from Guam hit four suspected Viet Cong es-, tablishments in South Viet Nam, two Wednesday night and twoj Thursday afternoon. Foreign Minister Tran Van Do cabled Secretary of State Dean Rusk an expression of "consterna- tion and sincere regrets" about the attack on the USIA center and its library in Hue. Outside of some uncontrolled elements, he said, "the Vietna- mese people have always been friendly to the Americans, to whom they are grateful for accept- ing sacrifices for the cause of freedom." No Americans were injured. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge called it "a distressing act." He said, "We do not believe this violent action represents the views of the Vietnamese people as a wholek" The attack reflected an old trend among antigovernment fac- tions to blame the United States for South Viet Nam's political troubles. Seek Counseling Improvements (OSA REORGANIZATION: Buddhist monks lead funeral procession through Hue, South Viet Nam today for a Vietnamese army lieutenant killed by an American helicopter gunner in Hue last week. Banner in background reads: "Down with Thieu and Ky." Lt. Gen. Nguyen is South Viet Nam's chief of state and Ky its premier. The procession later turned into an anti-American demonstration. Rep. Vivian Prepares To Visit China State Department Issues Passport; China Visa Needed The U.S. State Department said Wednesday it will issue Con- gressman Weston E. Vivian (D- Ann Arbor) a passport to travel to Communist China. The depart- ment will issue the passport, bUtt said that they can not guarantee that the Chinese government would issue a visa to permit the visit. Vivian wrote to Secretary Dean Rusk last March 28 requesting the passport to Communist China be- cause, he said, "It is a great mis- take for us to be in the dark" about Red China's scientific and technological developments. Vivian has been outspoken on behalf of admitting Red China into the United Nations. He has favored r e p 1 a c i n g Nationalist China with Red China on the Se- curity Council. All the nations on the Security Council would be then equipped with nuclear power. Vivian is also a member of the House Science and Astronautics Committee.sW h e n questioned about the visa he said, "I am not sure that I could or would go to China at this time because of the conflict in South Viet Nam. "All I wanted to find out in my query to the State Department was if it might be possible to go to Red China in the future if the diplomatic situation would permit it." Assistant Secretary of State Douglas McArthur II said in reply to Vivian, "Passports valid for travel to Communist China are issued to authorized news corres- pondents, public health officials, scholars, family members of per- sons imprisoned in Red China, and to those whose travel is considered in the national interest." The State Department considers that members of Congress fall within the national interest cate- gory. "Any American congressman who wants State Department per- mission to go to Red China can have it," the State Department spokesman remarked. This remark was an indication of the easing of travel bans to Communist China by the State Department. Actually, Americans rarely get into the Communist Chinese main- land, despite State Department policy relaxations, because the militant Peking regime is still strongly against mingling with what it calls U.S. "capitalist im- perialists." U.S. newsmen have been. wait- ing in vain to get into Red China with the State Department's per- mission. Beginning last December, By SHIRLEY ROSICK Ann Arbor ranks third in the world in the number of psychia- ti'ists per caipta, with more than 40 who see patients privately and an additional number who are connected exclusively with the University. Yet, a student who de. sires psychological treatment may have to wait two to three weeks for an interview. Even those who want counseling from a psychologist or social worker frequently have to wait a similar amount of time for inter- views, Does this hard-to-fill demand for psychological counseling indi- cate that a disproportionately large number of students seek counseling because a University setting naturally contributes to neurosis? Probably both yes and no. On the one hand, Dr. Thomas N. Cross of the Medical School says that emotional problems are common and that any psychiatric facility in the country is over- worked. The relatively short waiting list students are forced to endure here does not necessarily indicate that mental health facilities are gross- ly inadequate or that emotional difficulties among students are surprisingly rampant in compar- ison with other groups or areas in the country. Yet, the University "experience" is certainly a factor in explaining why students need to seek help at all. Dr. Donald Schaefer, director ent staff is adequate to handle thet some 2,000 cases that come toI interrelationships and exchanges between the various agencies al- them yearly. ready exist.p Cross says probably 250 pa- However, the move to adminis- tients a year, at a "very rough tratively coordinate the several guess," are treated at the Adult units would facilitate a more effi- Psychiatric Outpatient Clinic and cient system of keeping records the Intensive Psycotherapy Cen- of just how many students re- ters of University Hospital. How- ceive what type of counseling ever, about five times that many where and of research activity at come for evaluations, he said. the different counseling agencies. Cross said some University stu- The revision of the counseling dents use both facilities, though booklet, according to Mrs. Dav- they have to compete with state enport, is aimed at getting rid residents. And, again he contends of. the "yellow sheets" or "direc- that the number of personnel tory" approach to describing coun- here is not inadequate consider- seling services. ing the situation across the Penny Ingram, Grad, intern in country. the counseling office who is do- Nevertheless, the counseling of- ing the revising, says that she is fice sees acquiring additional clinic trying to make the new booklet personnel as its foremost objec- more "personal and honest" than tive in improving psychological its predecessor. She says she's at- counseling for University stu- tempting to give a feeling of a per- dents. sonae, or "someone who's been According to Mrs. Elizabeth through it," to the descriptions. Davenport of the counseling of- Mrs. Davenport indicated that fice, efforts will also be made to other changes in the OSA coun-' provide a more efficient adminis- trative "coordination" of the vari- ous agencies offering psychologi- AN cal counseling, while maintaining Appol tlLW the present decentralized system, r and to make the services more Secretarand "visible" to students. Major innovations will include the appointment of a new direc-' tor of counseling, expected to be President Harlan Hatcher an- announced by Vice-President for nounced today that Herbert W. Student Affairs Richard L. Cutler Hildebrandt of the speech depart- by July 1, and the revision of the ment was appointed to the posi- ol d"Guide to Counseling" book- 1 tion of secretary of the University seling division would probably in- clude: -the addition of premarital, marital counseling staff, a need which was pointed out by a Stu- dent Government Council com- mittee studying the problems of that area of counseling as well as sex education. The Mental Health clinic presently spends about one- third of its time on premarital, marital counseling problems ac- cording to Schaefer; -acquiring a full-time psychol- ogist who will do counseling in the OSA itself; -Staff additions within the of- fice itself to bring the number of personnel to four full-time and three part-time people in addition to the new director and -An expansion of the in-serv- ice training program for coun- selors to include "anyone who has anything to do with students," not Just those who counsel directly. University [Controller Faculty Senate. Dr. Hildebrandt has been a member of the Uni- versity faculty since 1958. In another appointment made by Vice-President Gilbert Lee,' Howard Cottrell was promoted let. and assistant to the president. ~' ~t