K.{; : R; Of by MAULSBY KIMBALL of New York MICHIGAN LEAGUE, Rooms 4 and 5 Thurs.-Fri., March 11-12-10:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m. WATER COLOR DEMONSTRATION "The Search for the Spiritual in Painting" Thurs.-Fri., March 11-12-3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Michigan League, Henderson Room, 3rd Floor Sponsored by the ANTHROPOSOPHICAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION }} ~f:. ::: ":"r.'d f;?:. r:..{... ..: f..}''...'......',... : .!}-} . :: . .. ?.;o }: '::,";: -.. . -':{ _ :::{ice 1 f 1{1{1{ t ! I 3 z Local program to aid drug addicts By ZACHARY SCHILLER A hard drug treatment and rehabili- tation program coordinated by the Wash- tenaw County Community Mental Health Center will begin operations within the next month. At first the program will be able to pro- vide only outpatient services for most patients, with occasional periods of brief hospitalization for severe cases. As it grows, the program hopes to ex- pand its services, and to eventually pro- vide extensive counseling, psychotherapy, medical care, and vocational guidance to gram will provide methadone treatment only when absolutely necessary. The first of two centers to begin opera- tion will be located in Ypsilanti, and will begin its operations latethis month or early in April. Organizers of the project expect the second center to open in Ann Arbor in July. Directors of the program emphasize that all cases will be strictly confidential, and that there will be no punitive legal ac- tions directed at the participating addicts. The program's immediate plans are severely limited by its low budget. Pre,- ently, $111,000 has been received from state, federal and local agencies. Directors of the. program feel that with this amount they can only begin to tackle the problem. They are anticipating diffi- culty in locating and funding adequate operating space and are seeking donated or low-rent facilities. So far, St. Joseph's Hospital has offered to provide some free medical services.. Beds for a limited number of addicts will be available in the Ypsilanti State Hos- pital and in the Neur'opsychiatric Insti- tute at University Hospital. Directors expect to coordinate services with local organizations already attempt- ing to deal with crisis drug situations. In addition to the small number of workers which the program will be able to employ, the directors are looking for competent ex- addicts to help in counseling. Richard Gilmore, administrator of the program, said yesterday that he hopes for a rapid expansion of the program so that services can be enlarged and improved. In its first year of operation, the program will hopefully be able to help 150 addicts on an outpatient basis. In a written statement of the goals and extent of the program, coordinators said that even with the assistance of the various agencies which are presently attempting to work with the drug situation, "we see ourselves only beginning to scratch the surface of the problem." To treat more severe 'gases of drug ad- diction, extended periods of treaiment and possible institutionalization are necessary, which is beyond the present capacity of this new program, the statement added. the addicts who participate in gram. According to current plans, page three the pro- the pro- im4c ir igttn NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 M EM ti BUSNESSPHONE: 764-0554 Page Three -1 m a 3020 Washtenaw. Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsi & A.A. Box Office Open 6:00 NOW SHOWING SHOW TIMES FRIDAY Saturday & Sunday 1, 3, 5, 7,9 Every Wednesday IS LADIES' DAY All Ladies 1-6 P.M. 75c IT'S FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT 1 Friday, March 12, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan E . _ nBeywsTAbriefs By The Associated Press I WE'RE HERE N~ N a WI 2. W, p, a ! WAYSIDE THEATRE -MAR A VETERAN COMBAT OFFICER accused two Army com- manders yesterday of covering up incidents of murder and torture of Vietnamese citizens. Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert, a 22-year Army veteran, said the statute of limitations will run out April 4, unless the Army brings charges against Maj. Gen. John Barnes and Col. J. Ross Franklin. Herbert charges the two officers covered up atrocities, including three murders and instances of torture, during a 58 day period in 1969. SCOTLAND YARD DETECTIVES roamed the streets of Belfast yesterday in search of the slayer of three British soldiers killed Wednesday night. In London, a member of the House of Commons demanded imme- diate internment of all members of the outlawed Irish Republican Army, suspected of the killings. The bodies of the three young soldiers, out of uniform and unarmed, were found on a mountain road leading from Belfast to the airport. * * .* NOBEL ECONOMIC LAUREATE Dr. Paul Samuelson de-j nounced continued federal subsidies for the supersonic transport 1yesterday as "colossal economic folly." Other witnesses before the Senate Appropriations Committee called the super plane a lemon, an economic albatross, and a dan- gerous pig-in-a-poke. Samuelson said continuing the SST project will not create more _ new jobs, may harm rather than improve the balance of payments, and may cost the nation hundreds of millions of dollars if the demand for the plane falls below hopes. * * * PRESENTS UNIVERSALLY ACCLAIMED FRENCH CELLIST PIERMon., Mar15,8:30 in Hill Auditorium -Associated Press Charges atrocity cover-up Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert yesterday publicly accused two Army commanders of covering up the murder and torture of Vietnamese civilians in 1969. Herbert said that because of his efforts to report atrocities he was called a "liar, a cheat, a crook, and relieved of his battalion command." See News Briefs, TROOPS 'CONGRATULATED': *.*. My Lai jury hears last w,,itness report FOURNIERR "The Keats of the cello." -New York Post Tickets for Rostropovich (Choral Union Series) to be used for this replacement TWO POLICEMEN WERE SLAIN and four students injured yesterday in a disturbance at the University of Puerto Rico, in San Juan. Chancellor Pedro Jose Rivera called police to the campus to put down a disturbance at the Student Center and the ROTC building. After the shooting he suspended classes, giving no indication when they would be resumed. Reportsdon the causes of the incident, which started when several. students allegedly smashed plates in the student cafeteria, were incom- plete, last night. t . 0 THE SENATE approved' an extension of the Appalachian aid program yesterday, spurning a request by President Nixon that it be phased out in favor of a nationwide revenue sharing plan. Republicans vigorously denied that the 77-3 vote was a setback for the President. The bill provides for a four-year, $571-million extension of the Ap-, palachian Regional Development Act of 1965. The administration had sought a one year extension of $283 million. PRESIDENT NIXON said yesterday that the Japanese textile industry's program to voluntarily restrain exports to the Unitedr States for three years "will not result in an acceptable solution" to the United States. The President declared he will stronglynsupport textile quota pro- visions of legislation now pending before Congress. Chairman Wilbur Mills of the House Ways and Means Committee said yesterday he was surprised and disappointed at Nixon's rejection of the Japanese industry offer. PROGRAM: SUITE NO. 6 IN D MAJOR .................J. S. Bach SONATA ARPEGGIONE IN A MINOR .......... Schubert THREE FANTASIESTUCKE, Op. 73...........Schumann ELEGY .....................................Faure SONATA IN A MAJOR .......................Franck FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP')- Col. Oran K. Henderson told Lt. William L. Calley Jr.'s. c o u r t martial jury in windup testi- mony yesterday that Gen. Wil- liam C. Westmoreland congrat- ulated the troops that assaulted My Lai. T h e trial's final witness, a brigade commander, said that a few days after t h e operation, Westmoreland, who was top American commander in Viet- nam at the time sent the partic- ipants "a congratulatory mes- sage for the My Lai operation." Henderson is awaiting court martial on charges of covering up atrocities at My Lai. It was a year before reports of a mass- acre of its villagers leaked be- yond the command level of the participating American Divis- ion. Henderson said his watchword to his commanders for the March 16, 1968 combat sweep through My Lai was "aggress- iveness." However, he testified his was a clouded view from the top of the operation - in a command helicopter 1,500 feet above the Vietnamese hamlet. He added that'he was able to see little in the way of detailed ground ac- tion. "At any time on the 16th, did you receive any official report from anyone concerning an in- cident in or around a ditch at My Lai 4," asked the court mar- tial judge, Col. Reid W. Ken- nedy. "I did not," replied Hen- derson. Henderson was the last wit- ness in a court martial that be- gan Nov, 12, one of three called, at the request of the jury after the government and the defense rested their cases. Calley is charged w i t h the premeditated murder of 102 un- resisting Vietnamese villagers while leading an infantry pla- toon of Charlie Company through the hamlet on a com- bat assault. The maximum pen- alty upon conviction is death.I Whitne Young dies at 49 LAGOS, Nigeria R) - Whit ney M. Young Jr., executive director of the National Urban League w h o focused his ef- forts in the civil rights move- ment on getting jobs for blacks, died yesterday while swimming. Young collapsed while ap- proaching the shore after swim- ming off Lighthouse Beach at Tarqua Bay. Cause of death was not immediately kn o wn, but a heart attack was considered a possibility. Between 1964 and 1966 Young's League efforts gained 40,000 new Jobs for unemployed blacks and 8,000 better jobs for black peo- ple. In 1961 Young was tapped to be executive director of the National Urban League, a biracial social work agency founded in 1910. Young resented being consid- ered a moderate in the civil rights movement. "We're all militants in different ways," he contended. "I can't af- ford the luxury of a completely dogmatic position that says I won't make any compromise be- cause I'm dealing with the real world." "There is no such thing as a moderate in the civil rights move- ment," he said at another time, "The difference is whether or not one is all rhetoric." "You can holler, protest, march, picket, demonstrate, but somebody must be able to sit in on the strat- egy conferences and p 1 o t a course," he said. The black leader had been swimming in the heavy surf with former U.S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, William W. B r o o m, the Washington bureau chief for Rid- der Publications, and the wives of the two men. "Ramsey pulled him out of the water and we gave him mouth to mouth resuscitation," said Broom. The League Thursday named Harold R. Sims, its deputy execu- tive director, as acting executive director until a successor to Young is appointed. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan' 420 Maynard St., Ann -Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. AA $1.50 830 Bob White accompanied by David ' Bromberg 3 NITES FRI. - SAT. - SUN. "Bob Whites - - inging songs that reach the deep- TICKETS: $7.00-$6.50-$6.00-$5.00-$3.50-$2.50 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER, ANN ARBOR, MICH. (Hours: Mon. through Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat. 9 to 12. Phone 665-3717) 11 - ! ONE WEEK ONLY! PREVIEWS TUES.! SEATS ON SALE! $1-$4.50! 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