For Daily subscrptions, phone 764-0558 A day with music 0. By LORIN LABARDEE In planning the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival, Peter Andrews and John Sinclair, members of Rainbow Multi-Media Corporation, an arm of the Rainbow People's Party, decided their main goal would be to make people aware that good jams exist outside the spectrum of rock music. From all indications their attempt has been a complete success. Now into its third and final day, the festival has attracted scores of people from across the county. Gate totals have been high throughout the entire series, with a grand total of 12,000 enthusiasts for the Friday night concert. Saturday's program featured a number of high points including the formal dedication of Otis Spann Memorial Field. In a brief cere- mony Muddy Waters presented a dedication plaque to Lucille Spann, widow of one of blue's greatest artists, Otis Spann. Other performers whose act set off barrages of hand-clapping and cries for more were Koko Taylor, Hound Dog Taylor and the House Rockers, and the Chicago Art Ensemble. Because of a unique ticket policy, those who attended the Saturday afternoon concert were not permitted to leave the festival site for more than half an hour. Unfortunately the whole good music scene was marred somewhat by a number of drug overdoses. A larger than average staff of Drug Help pe'ople and Psychedelic Rangers were kept busy walking people to the Drug Help tent and helping them recover. Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB Listening to the music Lucille Spann RUSSIAN CAGERS BEAT U. S. See Page 8 Y 5k igurn ~~IatF NON-BLUESY High-75 Low--S2 Clear, sunny, and warmer Vol. LXXXIII, No. 4 South Viets struggle for Tien Phuoc SAIGON- (I)-South Vietnamese forces hung on grimly yesterday in Tien Phuoc a district town in the north, repulsing com- munist tank assaults in a third day of street fighting. A military spokesperson on the northern front said: "The town is still contested, with the enemy in the northwest section and the South Vietnamese in the southeast." About 3,000 government troops supported by tanks have been thrown into the battle for' Tien Phuoc, which came under attack Thursday by more than 1,000 North Viet- namese infantrymen and Viet Cong, sup- ported by Soviet-built tanks. Tien Phuoc is in a mountain-ringed valley about 40 miles south of Da Nang and 12 miles west of coastal Highway 1. About 40,000 civilians in the valley have been cut off by the fighting, but there has been no word on military and civilian casualties. Associated Press correspondent Dennis Neeld said a communist force led /by six tanks attacked government positions around the Tien Phuoc airfield late Friday night, but was repulsed in heavy fighting. By yester- day morning the tanks had retreated a short distance and were "just sitting there," Neeld reported. Bad weather again curtailed U.S. air sup- port,, but at last report South Vietnamese units were said to be counterattacking the, communist-held district headquarters. In the air war, U.S. jets delivered more than 310 strikes in North Vietnam, on Friday aiming at railway targets.} The Air Force said F4 Phantom jets bombed the Vu Chua railroad bridge 46 miles northeast of Hanoi and destroyed -the 85- foot structure. The bridge had not been attacked before. Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 10, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages Securit Council to meet on air war in Mideast Daily Photo by DAVE MARGOLICK Market day A shopper tries to wrangle a lower price for a potted plant at the F armer's Market yesterday. The market was crowded with students during their first weekend back in town. NEW PROGRAMS PLANNED Harrison to head Trotter House By The Associated Press The United Nations Security Council was summoned into urgent session yesterday to deal with Mideast developments as Israeli and Syrian warplanes fought a swirling air battle over the occupied Golan Heights. Israel claimed its planes shot down three Syrian jets in the Golan Heights encounter and returned safely to base. Syria conceded the loss of three planes, two to ground missile fire, but claimed two Israeli jets downed. In New York, the Security Council meet- ing was set for 10 a.m. today. A U.N. spokes- man said Syria requested it to consider air strikes by Israeli jets into Syrian territory. Israeli warplanes made a series of raids Friday on targets in Syria and Lebanon in retaliation for the killing of 11 Israeli Olym- pic athletes in Munich last Tuesday by Arab commandos. The U.N. spokesman said Syria requested the emergency council session in a telephone call and letter to the mission of Chinese Ambassador Huang Hua, council president for September. A Syrian communique claimed Israel sent over another wave of planes 90 minutes after the Golan Heights dogfight yesterday, that Syrian planes intercepted and hit one of the intruders. There was no verification of a second en- gagement by Israel. Israel also reported one of its missile boats sank an Arab guerrilla boat outside Lebanese territorial waters Friday. The Palestine news agency Wafa said an Israeli boat was sunk Friday off the Israeli coast. The aerial battle was fought in clear view of hundreds of Israeli motorists, enjoying a morning outing on the Jewish New Year near the Sea of Galilee. They cheered as they saw Syrian planes go down. A Syrian spokesman said Syria's fighters and fighter-bombers delivered "a strong strike in the Golan Heights, causing material and human losses." It was called a reprisal raid for the air strike Israel launched Fri- day in Syria and Lebanon. A communique from Radio Damascus said one Syrian Sukhoi Su7 was shot down in the dogfight and two other planes were lost to Hawk missiles. See U.N., Page 10 By MARILYN RILEY T. R. Harrison, a local black activist, has been named director of Trotter House, the black student center for social and educa- tional activities and counseling.services. Harrison, from Battle Creek, entered the University as a freshman in the Fall, 1969. U' arson suspect Caswell under psychiatric care During the Black Action Movement class strike in Spring, 1970 he was arrested in the midst of a demonstration outside the Ad- ministration Bldg. Charge with felonious assault on an offic- er, Harrison was convicted despite claims that the evidence used against him was con- fusing and contradictory. The new Trotter House, located at 1443 Washtenaw in what was formerly the Zeta Psi fraternity, will open in October. It will replace the original house on South Univer- sity, which was destroyed by fire last May. Funds for the renovation of the house and the expansion of services had been provided as part of an alternative plan to the Afro- American Cultural Living Unit. Plans for the Cultural Living Unit were rejected by the Regents last March. An Ad Hoc Committee was created to explore al- tcrnative solutions to the problems faced by black students at the University. Although the Committee said in its report that the alternative plan does not "capture the student self-generated interest" that was shown for the cultural living project, it out- lined programs for this fall which would ful- fill the needs expressed by black students. These programs were approved by the Regents last July. They include: -Opening of black lounges and libraries in Stockwell and South Quad which will be equipped with books and educational aids in areas of black: interests. The lounges will not only be centers for black students, but also will "provide an outreach mechanism for contacting non-minority students," -The expansion of minority counseling and informational services within the coun- seling division of the Office of Student Serv- ices (OSS); -The beginning of Project Awareness within OSS. The program aims at solving conflicts which may arise in integrated housing; and -Six thousand dollars has been set aside in a Facilities Assistance Fund, which would assist needy minority organizations in rent- ing University buildings, such as the Union or League, to hold meetings or special pro- grams. According to Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson, the expanded serv- ices of Trotter House can only be a partial answer to black student's problems. "They may be diminished, but I doubt if they'll all go away," Johnson says. By JIM KENTCH Randy Caswell, '75, charged with setting one of the 70 fires that plagued the campus last January and February, is currently re- ceiving treatment at a mental institution in Washtenaw County while awaiting a pre- trial hearing on Oct. 27. Caswell is accused of setting a fire Feb. 3 in the University's General Library. It was one of a series of fires that occured in about a dozen campus buildings resulting in an es- timated $5,000 damage. Edward Vandenberg, an Ann Arbor at- torney currently handling Caswell's case, said he could not disclose Caswell's where- abouts. Vandenberg is handling the case while Caswell's regular lawyer is out of town. Caswell has been a patient at both Ypsilanti State Hospital and the University's Neuro- psychiatric Institute. Spokespersons for the admissions departments of both institutions said they had no record of Caswell as a patient currently. Circuit Court Judge Ross Campbell ruled on June 2, after hearing testimony from the State Forensics Association that Caswell was mentally competent to stand trial. The in- forma.tion wasbse nn examrinatin o(f serious mental problems and pass the test," Vandenberg adds. Vandenberg maintains that Caswell is in need of the treatment he is currently re- ceiving and that "the treatment has to be continued." County Prosecutor William Delhey indicated last June that charges against Caswell have not been expanded because of the questions of his mental health but added that further charges may be filed at a later date. Sen. Church Conferenceto probe plight o aged.in society Leading experts in the field of aging will flock to the University Sept. 11-13 to discuss the status of older people in society and to listen to guest speakers including Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chairperson of the U.S. Senate Special Commission on Aging: The 25th Annual Conference on Aging will discuss such ,issues as a national policy on aging, the political and social roles of older people in a post-industrial economy, and the biological implications of the extended life. In addition to Church, key speakers will include Dean Wilbur Cohen of the Univer- sity's School of Education and former secre- tary of Health, Education and Welfare, and other educators, scientists and lawyers from across the nation. Join The Daily If you're into politics, ecology, c o n s u m erism, photography, sports or advertising-or even if you're not, there's a place for you at The Daily. If you'd like to help put out a daily newspaper (and get a lot of experience, if not much money), we'd like to have you. Be sure to drop by 420 Maynard, Tuesday at 8 p.m. for our mass meeting. More than 800 persons, including policy makers and professionals from a wide spec- trum of organizations and agencies, are ex- pected to attend the anniversary. event. Recognition of seven "American Pioneers in Aging" tomorrow will highlight the con- ference, along with a panel discussion Tues- day to recall 25 years of gerontology in Michigan. During a session on "World Perspectives i Ain " " nthrii.frnm Tcn.! F rance. Courses with a I fferen PESC By REBECCA WARNER Last January the Program for Educational and Social Change (PESC) achieved campus-wide attention during a squabble with the University over its policy of opening up courses to the com- munity free of charge. PESC remains this term stead- Women By MERYL GORDON As a result of increasing cam- pus interest in women's studies, the University is offering several new fall courses and sections of traditional courses which deal with various aspects of women in society, Pilot Program Course 240 (3 look Course Mart By JUDYjRUSKIN While the University's history and sociology departments may have snubbed the youth of the much-maligned 50's, a Course Mart Course this term is delv- ing into their culture - "what was important to teenagers, like girls and cars." .... . .. .,..: