NIXON'S SLUSH FUND See Editorial Page YI 1 Sr ~IaitiF FRIGID High-17 Low-6 Partly sunny, more snow possible Vol. LXXXI, No. 92 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 29, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages .; ,l:.: PESC hurt in funding shortages Enthusiasm high among students for new courses By DANIEL JACOBS Saddled with continuing financial difficulties, the Pro- gram for Educational and So- cial Change (PESC) has be- gun to turn its efforts away from immediate expansion and toward consolidation of its current program for aca- demic reform. PESC's b u d g e t surplus now stands at little over $50, as $2,000 has been allotted to PESC in- structors Hank Bryant andChar- les Thomas for use in their Com- munity Control course, it was learned at a PESC meeting yester- day. The $100 grant forthcoming from the literary college student government will offer only slight relief to the some $1500 deficit the program now projects. The enthusiasm of University students, on the other hand, has been up to PESC's expectations. Their attendance in the commu- nity courses has been high, and the accompanying credit procedure has until now received official sanction. That procedure involves a student electing the community program as a form of independent study under a PESC professor. In addition, PESC is now begin- ning to encourage interested stu- dents to incorporate educational and social change as an ndepend- ent major towards a BA or BS degree, or as a part of the BGS program. Although PESC will begin a fund- raising drive among a large por- tion of the University's faculty, most members concede that full realization of PES's goals must wait at least another semester. And while the literary college has set aside $50,000 for "educa- tional innovation," the money is to be used for equipment purchases only and distributed by competi- tive bidding of the various depart- ments, according to LSA Dean Frank Rhodes. With a curriculum consisting cf several University courses and t h r e e autonomous community courses, PESC has envisioned mu- tually helpful student-community participation in all phases of its program. In practice, however, community participation has been lagging, especially in the Univer- sity courses. According to Thomas, the lack of a public transportation system in the county has prevented many community people from attending either University courses or PESC meetings. Thomas says that he and Bryant have themselves driven community students to and from See FINANCIAL, Page 8 --- . i; : : -Associated Press Hod gson decries strike Secretary of Labor James Hodgson tells a news conference yes- terday that the West Coast dock strike threatens to halt the nation's economic recovery. He called on Congress to enact 4 President. Nixon's bill for a forcible settlement of the dispute, saying that the legislators have shown "little sense of urgency" in the 'matter. (See News Briefs, Page 3). FAST ]DAY: Help to Bangladesh inds dorm support By MARY KRAMER In an effort to raise funds for the newly-formed nation of Bangla- desh, supporters here have organized a day of fast to be held February 16 in University residence halls. Bangladesh, formerly known as East Pakistan, was established last month when Indian army forces defeated troops of the federal government of General Yahya Kahn. In a statement released yesterday, organizers of the University based Friends of Bangladesh Refugee Fund Coalition announced they had come close to the required 30 per cent support needed in most residence halls for the scheme to work. Under their plan, the University's housing office will contribute <.from 75 cents to two dollars for -Daily-Denny Gainer Creative display Students wander through the student artfair on display this week in the Michigan Union, perusing their peers handiwork. The art work in the lower left hand corner was carved from an apple. 10 AMERICANS HURT: Saigon braces for attack as f ighting flares nearby VD declines here health figures show By KATHY BYRNES In apparent contradiction to a national trend, Washtenaw County saw no substantial increase in cases of venereal dis- ease last year, according to figures of the county health de- partment. Recent widely publicized national figures show a 16 per cent increase in the number of cases of gonorrhea and an eight per cent rise in cases of syphilis last year. Although county figures for 1971 show a slight increase in the number of cases of syphilis, there was a significant reduction - some 114 cases - in 'the more prevalent disease of gonorrhea. These county figures were given additional credence re- cently through surveys by doctors at the University Health Service who say that the rate of infection among students has also decreased. Dr. Robert Anderson, director of the University's Health Service, says that an increasing awareness by students of the dangers of VD is one factor which may have contributed to the apparent reduction in cases of the disease here. He cites figures showing that only "about one out of ten students coming into the Health Service believing they have VD actually have it" as.. evidence of this awareness. "There' has been a more in- 1 tense educational effort to let people know early treatmentx was important and a willing- ness to accept such treat- mless of the taboo sort of stuff." Since August last year, the Health Service has instituted free testing for venereal dis- ease, Anderson added, and this may also be a factor in the supposed reduction of infec- Robert Anderson tion rates. As an additional means of helping students who feel they may have contracted VD, the Health Service has a new tele- phone information service to answer questions on sexually transmitted diseases. By far the majority of the total number of cases re- ported here were gonorrhea, less than ten per cent syphilis. Doctors stress, however, that the majority of cases of both types of VD are never reported or treated at all. The reduction in venereal disease here is all the more surprising because it runs contrary to what epidemiologists are calling an epidemic of VD nationwide. This epidemic, which caused a 40 per cent increase in VD infection rates in Washtenaw County between 1969-70, now seems to have been checked here. Several reasons have been propounded for the national increase in VD infection, among them increased sexual ac- tivity among teen-agers, the prime victims of VD; a reduc- tion in the use of condoms, which serve as a barrier to trans- mission of the disease, along with a switch to contraceptive See NUMBER, Page 8 Hea l thService plans modified By JUDY RUSKIN Plans for a comprehensive health program for students, faculty members and administrators have been abandoned by the Committee on Long Range Planning for the University's Health Service in favor of expanding student services only. The committee of faculty members and administrators recently termed the proposed expansion of health care facilities as "imprac- tical," and will instead study ways for expanding health services for students. Committee members point out sthat a comprehensive health plan for faculty and administrators is being offered through the University medical center. The plan, as originally conceived in a report to the Regents last year, essentially called for the integration of the existing health <"service into a broader unit under the control of the medical center. Medical services for students, faculty and staff would have been provided by the new unit under a comprehensive health care plan funded by a compulsory fee levied on members of the University community. Now, however, the responsibility for student health care will re- main with the existing health serv- icet-hough there will still, for the first time, be a compulsory fee k assessment to pay for it. Medical services for other members of the community will continue to be pro- vided separately by the medical centet. ~ '~' ~Vice President Robert Knauss annocnced at last week's Office of Student Services Policy Board SAIGON (f') - Communist-led forces wounded 10 Americans and shot up a resupply helicopter in a flurry of fighting east of Saigon yesterday, the U.S. Com- mand said today. The troopers of the 1st Air Cavalry Division, guarding Sai- gon's eastern flanks, were wound- ed in a series of four incidents that included a shelling, a mine explosion and two brief fire- fights. The South Vietnamese mili- tary command announced that an official radio report of sharp fighting within 10 miles of Sai- gon's northwestern edge was in error, and blamed it on a mixup in information from the field. Meanwhile, the U.S. Command reported yesterday the 20th air strike inside North Vietnam this year ,and also belatedly dis- closed the loss of two American aircraft to "mechanical failures." The latest air strike was trig- gered Thursday afternoon, the command said, when a radar site in North Vietnam controling a surface-to-air missile battery be- gan tracking U.S. planes, bomb- ing the Ho Chi Minh Trail in neighboring Laos. The two aircraft losses dis- closed yesterday bring to 8,097 the number of U.S. planes and helicopters lost to all causes in Indochina since Jan. 1, 1961. The Saigon military radio er- 4HR-RIP to setplatform at conventionl With an eye toward April's city elections, the Human Rights- Radical Independent Party will hold a platform convention today in the Michigan Union. The platform convention - which will cover a range of issues including community planning, in- stitutionalized racism and sexism and party structure, - bears spe- cial significance according to par- ty members, since all HR-RIP candidates for City Council will be bound to the Party's platform planks. HR-RIP was organized a year ago to provide a leftwing alternative to the Republican and Democratic parties. Party members say that a significant portion of the new- ly - enfranchised 18-21-year-old voters may bolster the party's in- fluence in city politics this year. each student who voluntarily miss- es a meal. The housing office stip- ulates, however, that at least 30 per cent of the residences in each unit must agree to the fast, and the money must go to an officially recognized University activity. To date, the following residence halls have met the 30 per cent figure: Bursley, .Cousins, Jordan, Markley, Martha Cook, Oxford and West Quad. The latter hurdle was overcome a week ago when President Rob- ben Fleming, in one of' his rare public statements on non-Univer- sity issues, urged support for the campaign. Describing the new nation, Flem- ing said, "Already poor, and now the victim of a tragic war, i t s leadership has been decimated, its crops destroyed, and its ; people left homeless. Measured solely in terms of human survival, t h e months ahead are critical. "Those people who care can show their concern by supporting this compassionate crusade." Residents of the halls seem to share similar reasons for their participation in the fast. "T h e See SUPPORTERS, Page 8 roneously reported two battalions of South Vietnamese rangers at- tached to the 5th Infantry Divi- sion battled Viet Cong troops for seven hours beginning at dawn just to the east and southeast of the Quang Trung Military Train- ing Center. This was also the scene of heavy fighting in the last Tet offensive. It was the second mistaken report produced by official Viet- namese sources in three days, underscoring a heightened state of nervousnesspervading South Vietnam as the Tet lunar new year approaches with widespread predictions of a Viet Cong of- fensive. The first report, on Wednes- day, said aircraft had destroyed four enemy tanks, which turned out to be trucks. The radio claimed 23 Viet Cong were killed in the clash, and eight rifles and many important docu- ments, were captured. There was no report on South Vietnamese casualties. Communist troops shelled a South Vietnamese ranger com- pany 35 miles northwest of Sai- gon and then launched a ground attack. Field reports said one Ranger was killed and six were wounded. For weeks South Vietnamese troops have been sweeping areas northwest of Saigon trying to prevent Communist forces from concentrating for a new offen- sive. IMMUNITY QUASHED Russo ordered to stand trial with Ellsberg in secrets ease LOS ANGELES (M - A fed- eral judge has ruled that An- thony Russo, a former Rand Corp. researcher, must stand trial with Daniel Ellsberg de-, spite his once being granted immunity in return for grand jury testimony about the Pentagon Papers case. Russo never testified, as a re-! sult of numerous legal tangles. U.S. District Court Judge Mat- thew Byrne Jr. said yesterday the law "provides that the immunity attaches at the time that the tes- timony is given and that the scope of the immunity is determined by the testimony.." After conferring with attorneys, Byrne postponed the trial until May 9 because of the involvement of Ellsberg's attorney in the Har- risburg, Pa., trial of the Rev. Phillip Berrigan and seven others. ACTIVE IN CONGRESS Byrne set pretrial hearings for Feb. 29 and May 1. He said he would confer with attorneys in the interim to calcu- late the progress in the Harris- burg trial and determine if any further postponements would be needed. Russo was not present. Russo, 35, is charged with re- ceiving stolen government docu- ments - the papers relating the origins of the Vietnam war-and of conspiring with Ellsberg to copy and distribute them to the news media. Russo's attorney, Michael Bala- ban, argued that Russo was im- mune from prosecution and that it was the government's fault that he didn't testify. Russo, called before the grand jury at the inception of the case, refused to testify, claiming the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. A judge or- dered him to testify under a grant of immunityy, but he still re- fused, was ruled in contempt and jailed. After 45 days in jail, Russo an- nounced he would testify if given a transcript of his testimony to make public. A federal judge is- Success spurs Black Caucus WASHINGTON (P) - The congressional Black Caucus, organized to give the na- tion's 25 million blacks a voice in Wash- ington, has been stunned with its success and rapid growth. Less than a year after it was launched by a dozen House Democrats, the caucus is bursting the seams of its offices, strain- ing its budget and draining the energies of gesting projects for it, and duplicating it at the state and local political level. "Psychologically, this is the most pro- found political symbol that has ever been offered to black Americans," says Rep. John Conyers Jr., (D-Mich.), a caucus member. The caucus is in the process of setting itself up as a nonprofit corporation to pro-