THE -MI-CHIGAN DAILY Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1'age Three Hearst $4 million food ransom By AP and UPI HILLSBOROUGH, Calif. - The massive food giveaway program aimed at obtaining the release of kidnaped Patricia Hearst -is being delayed for at least two days because of supply prob- lems, a spokesperson said yester- day. "Since high-quality food as out- lined in the SLA demands cannot be purchased by tomorrow," the spokesperson said, "we will not open on Tuesday." Meantime, the Randolph Hearst family continued its tense vigil with no new word on the 20- year-old girl's fate. "THERE IS nothing for us to do. It is frustrating, just wait- ing," said family spokesman Jay Bosworth, brother-in-law of Pa- tricia Hearst who was taken from her Berkeley apartment three weeks ago. Leaders of People in Need said they were reorganizing the free food distribution system because of confusion, crowding and vio- lence which marred the first dis- tribution Friday at four centers. The distribution was scheduled to continue Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at a dozen loca- tions. 'The response has been super," said PIN's acting director, Peg- program gy Maze. "People from all over the country have been sending bread, milk, frozen food, money and love." HEARST said the latest de- mand was beyong his personal means, but the Hearst Corp. of- fered to provide the additional money if his 20-year-old Univer- sity of California daughter is re- leased unharmed. rCharles Bates, special agent in charge of the FBI's San Francis- co office, said the counteroffer made Friday "throws the ball back" to the kidnapers. But he said no new word had been re- ceived from the SLA. "There is nothing new at all, no communi- cation," he said. "A great many mistakes were made" in Friday's initial give- away, said Ludlow Kramer, the Washington secretary of state who organized PIN at Hearst's request. DESPITE the problems, 14,000 people received free food, Kram- er said. He added he hopes the Hearst money plus donations will lead to a program that will feed 100,000 needy Californians indefinitely. Ms. Hearsts' voice was on three tape recordings received from the SLA, which described her as delayed a prisoner of war and threaten- ed to kill her if any rescue at- tempt is made. The initial PIN funding includ- ed $500,000 from Hearst person- ally and $1.5 million from t h e nonprofit Hearst Foundation. HEARST is president and edi- tor of the San Francisco Exam- iner and chairman of the Hearst Corp. The SLA said that Hearst should feed the needy as an act of repentence because he is a "corporate enemy of the peo- ple" whose business dealings have hurt innocent people. An SLA message received on Thursday threatened to cut off communications unless Hearst provided the additional $4 million within 24 hours. Bates was asked yesterday if at some point he would consider the SLAeto have cut communica- tions. He said, "At some point, yes. I just don't know w h e n that point will be. I don't think we are at the point as yet." C TRAVEL PRESENTS: EUROPE SUMMER FLIGHTS 0 all flights round-trip from Detroit to Frankfurt, Germany ' May 1-May 23 .. $254.00* May 22-June 20 . . $274.00* June 20-Aug. 15. $274.00* *prices expected to increase 6% due to fuel increases NOTE: a long flight from mid-May to Mid-August is currently being. negotiated 1nformat ion at UAC Travel 2nd floor Union-763-2147 AP Photo Breakthrough for eye patients? Dr. Eliot Bergson of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary in Boston helps a patient use a recently developed electronic light amplifying device originally used by battlefield soldiers in Vietnam. The instrument enhances vision in dimlight and many be beneficial to victims of a blinding disease called Retinitis Pigmentosa. The light amplifier was developed for the military by the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. (ITT) for the Army Night Vision Laboratory in Fort Belvoir, Va. The developers say a marketable device may be r e a d y in less than two years. Dr. Steward Flaschen, technical director for ITT, said the device uses the principles of television signal reception to boost faint light signals for the viewer to see on a specially coated lens. PANEL REQUESTS FUNDS: President suppresses heart research study, group sayvs I Financial Aid Applications FOR Spring-Summer Term Applications are available at the Office of Financial Aid (2011 S.A.B.). Students wishing to be consider- ed for assistance or for full-time College Work- Study Employment, should pick up these forms now. The deadline date for submission of all com- pleted application materials is March 1, 1974. SILENT COMEDY CLASSICS COMEDY SHORTS (at 6:30 A program of early comedy shorts-by Chaplin, Keaton, Lloyd,, and Langdon. THE GOLD RUSH (at 8:30 and 10:15) Chaplin's first, and, many think (including himself), finest feature comedy. The tramp looks for his fortune in the rough human nature of the Yukon country. ARCHITECTURE cinema guild $1 each show AUDITORIUM Editor's Note: This article was compiled by the Chronicle of Higher Education. Frustrated scientists are press- ing the Nixon Administration to release a long-suppressed report that recommends a substantial increase in funds to support heart research and education at each of the nation's medical schools, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. The report, which was prepar- ed by a special President's Ad- visory Panel on Heart Disease in 1972, has been bottled up ever since, apparently because of its liberal spending recommenda- tions run counter to the Admin- istration's desire to keep federal spending in check. A COPY of the report was ob- tained recently by The Chronicle, a higher education weekly news- paper. The report contains doz- ens of recommendations for a co- ordinated attack on heart dis- ease through research, educa- tion, communication and delivery of health services. Two of its major recommenda- tions call for the federal govern- ment to spend $10 million a year to support a "cardiovascular re- search professorship" in every medical school in the country, and another $10 million a year to support 50 additional "profes- sorial groups," each consisting of several competent cardiovascular investigators. The report also re- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 123 Tuesday,'February 26, 1974 is edited and managed by students at, the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0582. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during' the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other stater and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area): $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio), $7.00 non-local mail other states and foreign)..1 g1 commends support for teaching and training at medical schools, The Chronicle says. A prime goal of the recom- mendations is to introduce stable funding to a bio-medical research scene that has been troubled by uncertainty in recent years as federal programs were stopped and started. The proposed grants for research professorships would be for ten years; the grants for research groups, for seven years. THE REPORT was prepared for President Nixon by a panel of 20 experts headed by John Millis, chancellor emeritus of Case Western Reserve Univer- sity. The panel was appointed with considerable flourish on April 4, 1972, and was asked "to deter- mine why heart disease, is so prevalent and so menacing and what can be done about it." It held its first meeting on May 18, launched a crash effort to meet an early Presidential deadline, and submitted its final report to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) on Sept. 1, 1972. Six weeks later the report was forwarded to President Nixon. It never emerged from t h e White House. NO OFFICIAL explanation has ever been offered as to why the report was not released. But one HEW source told The Chron- M PIN BOWLING March 2-10 WIN A FREE GAME Michigan Union icle: "We weren't prepared to accept the recommendations. They threw in everything but the kitchen sink. If you cost it out, it would have eaten up the entire budget to mount the enormous program they recommended." Whatever the reason, the sup- pression has angered many scien- tists who believe the recommend- ations should be made public and allowed to stand or fall on their own merit. One member of the Millis pan- el - Julius Comroe, director of the University of California's Cardiovascular Research Insti- tute in San Francisco wrote a let- ter to Science Magazine, pub- lished in the Jan. 18 issue, complaining that Congress has been deprived of a report that might be useful in developing federal health research budgets. L 11! Which presently sponsors DAYSTAR CONCERTS FUTURE WORLDS MUSKET SOPH SHOW 1I COLLEGE JUNIOR PROGRAM FOR GIRLS Attend the college of your choice. Receive over $500 per month for your senior year. Apply during your junior year. Serve as an Army Officer (only 2 years). For details contact: Lt. Carla L.B. 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