FLOOD RETRIAL POSSIBLE The Michigan Daily-Saturday, February 10, 1979-Page 7 Experiential learning programs Jury-tampering probe ordered From UPI, AP, and Reuter The Justice Department decided yesterday to conduct a jury-tampering investigation concerning the lone juror who held out to acquit Rep. Daniel Flood of bribery and perjury charges. The Flood case ended in a mistrial last week when the jury declared itself deadlocked. U.S. Dsitrict Judge Oliver Grasch, who declared the mistrial, recently disclosed that late in the deliberations, he received a note from a juror concer- ned about statements made by the lone holdout for acquittal. GASCH SAID the holdout, William Cash, reportedly told hi tolleagues at one point that a "confi itial source" .gave him damagaing im mation about three key prosecution witnesses. . Justice Department spokesman Terrence Adamson said yesterday that Assistant Attorney General Philip Heymann, "based on information reported about the statements made during the Flood jury deliberations, has determined that, in the best interest of, the administration of justice, an inquiry should be opened into those reports." "The FBI is being instructed to con- duct such an inquiry," Adamson said. HE SAID A decision "on whether to move for a retrial of Mr. Flood will be' made at a later date." Flood, 75, has been hospitalized for exhafstion since the trial, and Justice Department officials have conceded his age and frailty will be factors in any decision on whether to prosecute him again. The New York Times, quoting sour- ces closely familiar with the case, reported Cash as having told the others that a confidential source had informed' him that three of the witnesses against Flood had stolen $176,000 from the congressman and that he had discovered the loss when a check he wrote for $46,000 bounced. PROSECUTORS ARE reportedly concerned because the information Cash allegedly imparted to the other jurors was similar to that contained in a year-old FBI report. That report was based on statements from Stephen Elko, a former aide to Flood, who was the chief government witness against the congressman. Officials report figures similar to those offered by Cash were contained in Elko's statements to the FBI a year ago. Elko reportedly told investigators that Flood said in 1970 that a member of the congressman's staff had taken part in an effort to steal $175,000. The New York Times quoted Cash as saying he had not heard of Flood before the trial and did not have any outside contacts during the three weeks the jury was sequestered while the trial was in progress. Flood was accused of taking more than $50,000 in payoffs in return for using his influence as chairman of an important congressional subcommittee on health, education and welfare. Belgian troops sent into Zaire KINSHASA, Zaire (AP)-Belgium's decision to send 250 paratroopers to this former Belgian colony in central Africa stems from critical food shortages, unrest among ill-paid Zairian troops and the need to show support for President Mobuto Sese Seko, diplomatic sources said yesterday. Belgian Foreign Minister Henri Simonet told news editors in Brussels the operation resulted from fear that 3 million hungry Zairians in this capital city might turn on 30,000 well-fed Europeans. KINSHASA-BASED Belgian diplomat Willy Verriest said: "There is no direct, visible threat, but the situation here is volatile. It's not a racial or political situation-it's a question of have and have nots." A 70 per cent inflation rate, corrup- tion, bad crops, gasoline shortages and dwindling medical services have produced terrible and - spreading misery in Kinshasa. "I am seeing starvation here for the Join the 0rts Staff first time in my life," said an American .diplomat. 4 Many foreigners believe that if trouble does start it will be aimed not at the Europeans but at the estimated 15,000 Zairian officials and businessmen who have accumulated vast wealth. Official corruption exists at every level, from customs officials to hungry soldiers forced to prey on black civilians. SIMONET'S OFFICIAL explanation in Brussels was that the troops were being sent to help train a brigade of 4,000 Zairian soliders. Sources in Brussels said the troops would be sent by Monday. Zairian sources said the immediate reasson for the Belgian move was unrest and some shooting last week among the 4,000 Zairian soldiers being trained at Kitona, the coastal base about 310 miles west of here where the paratroops will be sent. The Zairian sources said the soldiers rebelled against lack of food and pay, a common problem for the 22,000-man army. What alarmed the Belgians was that the Kitona brigade was being trained by Belgium to replace 300 Moroccan and 15 Senegalese troops, who have been patrolling copper-rich Shaba province, formerly Katanga, since the invasion of Angola-based rebels last May. About 800 Africans and 130 Europeans died during a rampage of looting and killing following the in- vasion last year. France and Belgium airlifted troops into Zaire to repulse the invasion. face pos (Continued from Page 1) curricula he needs for his career." Reinharz said, however, that adding more academic requirements and in- volving a greater number of faculty members would be a reasonable revision of the Outreach program. "If a little extra reading is required, we could easily move in that direction," Reinharz said. "But if that's a message from the committee that experiential learning is not a valid means of education, I would be opposed to it." REINHARZ SAID between 900 and 1,000 students are involved in Outreach each term, and that if credit for ex- periential courses were completely YES, I am ir tine's Day M Classifieds. $1.00 .50 f VEILENTI Vs L EIT 3 4 NAME ADDRESS CITY An Inn(l %%I L 1 nterested in sendi lessage through t )_for the first 2 lin or each additiona INE MESSAGE: PHONE ovative Way to Si ,OVE Your sible LSA revisions revoked, the program would collapse. "The whole program would come to a crashing halt, and the students and the community would be miserable," she said. "It would be a conservative, un- necessary action." The Curriculum Committee - com- posed of nine voting faculty and three voting student members - is scheduled to meet with the LSA Executive Com- mittee next week in an informal session to discuss various aspects of experien- tial learning programs. "IT WILL simply be an exploratory session," said Prof. John Knott, chair- man of the Curriculum Committee. "There are lots of different things we can recommend for the future, and we will discuss them in committee meetings after this session." Jeff Liebster, a Law School student and a coordinator for Project Com- munity's court-watching program, said he favors the plan to review the program by the Curriculum Commit- tee, but added that he feels credit for the course should not be revoked. "Experiential learning is a very necessary part of everyone's education," he said. "I would invite any critics of such courses to sit in on the court-watching program, to observe that this type of education is important and necessary." ng a Valen- he DAILY les; d line ay Young Chinese riot TOKYO (UPI) - Hundreds, of young Chinese intellectuals 'demanding jobs have raged through the streets of Shanghai for several days, looting and clogging vital transportation lines, Japan's Kyodo News Service reported yesterday from Peking. Kyodo said the intellectuals were assigned to other Chinese regions following training in Shanghai and have staged angry protests apparently because they want to return to the bustling city of 10.8 million. "The demonstrators stopped trains, cut power to trolleybuses, damaged public facilities and held officials of the Shanghai Labor Bureau hostage," Kyodo said, quoting Radio Peking and the Peking-based People's Daily. _r .1