Poge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 17, 1972 Poge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 17, 1972 today-.. continued from Page 1) War news BELFAST -- Protestant vigilantes claimed British soldiers battling Belfast street mobs shot and killed three teen-age boys last night and that a British armored car crushed the head of a 10-year-old youngster. The bloody rioting in Northern Ireland's capital exploded after British soldiers elsewhere shot down two Irish gunmen and wounded another at a roadblock near a sleepy country village. Abrams to Vietnam WASHINGTON-Gen. Creighton Abrams took command of the Army yesterday and was immediately ordered to Vietnam for a firsthand assessment of the war. Shortly after swearing in Abrams as Army Chief of Staff, Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird said Abrams will leave tonight for Saigon "to make an on-the-scene evaluation of Vietnamization progress." A Penta- gon spokesman would not comment when asked if the trip had anything to do with the peace talks. Nixon says no amnesty WASHINGTON-President Nixon has pledged to families of men missing and prisoners of war in Vietnam that he will not grant amnesty to draft dodgers and desprters, who will have to "pay a price for their choice." Making an unexpected ap- pearance yesterday at the annual convention of the National League of Families of POWs-MIAs, the President said he has been criticized by some "as being lacking in compassion" on the amnesty issue. "When thousands of Americans died for their choice and hundreds are now POWs or missing in action for their choice, it would be the most immoral thing I could think of to give amnesty to draft dodgers and those who deserted," he said. Dope note. GARY, Ind.-A special federal grand jury impaneled yester- day in Hammond was assigned to investigate illegal drug traffic in the Gary-Hammond region and a related gang war that has left 22 persons dead since January. The -war has been waged between a street gang called "The Family" and the pushers of the drug market in Gary, Indiana's third largest city. Organ- ized crime has been indirectly involved, police detectives say, as the source of heroin and other drugs distributed by the city pushers. Chicago, New York and Detroit have been mentioned as source cities. "The syndicate always has run a decentralized operation in Gary and East)Chicago," one city official said. "The pushers here buy from the syndicate but aren't with the Mafia, obviously, because they're all black." Local unit plans parade. Campus party slates face dubious future Med Center offers health care By CINDY HILL C1 The Credentials and Rules Com- mittee (C&R) for the fall elections met well into the night to discuss' the possible deletion of the Re- sponsible Alternative Party (RAP) name from the election ballot. The hearing resulted from in- cumbent S t u d e n t Government Council (SGC) candidate Curt Steinhauer's claim to the RAP name. Insurgent RAP members have disputed Steinhauer's right to the party name. Election Director Victor Gut- man denied Steinhauer's claim to the title after receiving a letter from RAP secretary Bill Kre- baum listing present candidates on the SGC slate to include only Mat Dunaskiss, Debbie Allen and Stuart Weiner. Steinhauer demanded the right to use the RAP name, and that the party had no right to oust him. At midnight, it was unclearj whether the RAP name would beF used by any of the candidates presently on the ballot. Another party in jeopardy of losing its slate name is the much- publicized, one-man Bullshit Par- ty. Chairperson Dave Hornstein was denied injunctive relief during a Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) hearing scheduled to determine whether he had received sufficient notice of the election code ruling barring one-member parties. Claiming the Bullshit Party was "a registered student organization recognized by SGC," iHornstein cited the candidacy of Jim Bloom last spring, the sole candidate of the SAFEGUARD ticket, as a pre- cedent. Gutman replied he "did not feel bound to follow the mistakes of my predecessor," and said the re- sponsibility for reading the copy of the election code that was given to Hornstein "falls upon the candi- date." CSJ voted unanimously to deny injunctive relief, which would re- quire the Bullshit Party name to be added to the ballot. A second hearing is scheduled for Oct. 26 to determine the con- stitutionality of the one-man slate ban. Forest fires bir IMOre than trees (continued from Page 1)ly helpful in defraying the costs of children who will want - to partici- the program for Medicaid people, pate," Carpenter added. who ordinarily could not afford the The greatest problem the pro- yearly fee on their own. gram now faces is how to obtain "We're very anxious to try to the funds necessary to get the or- meet the needs of the Medicaid ganization off the ground. people in the county," Carpenter Although the'plan has received explained, "since the poor have "moral support" from the public, more of almost any sickness you legislators and employes of the can think of than the rich." University, not enough money has yet been made available. In order to determine the needs "There's a lot of excitement of community members, a consum- right now about the program," -- ------ Carpenter explained, "but whether: the legislators are excited enough to spend money is something you never know." er advisory group will be set up to give advice and guidance in the running of the new program. The Medical Center will be responsible for directing the program. The HMO will also be working with other community health or- ganizations, such as the Free Clinic, the Model Cities program and St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, in order to avoid duplication of medi-F cal services. arious parts of the country. How- ever, "there has been great de- bate nationally as to whether they have been effective," Carpenter said. The Kaiser Health Plan, a simi- lar health plan which originated in California, has generated some op- position to pre-paid health plans, since it has decreased by half the amount of time patients spend in hospitals. "We want to make .sure we're "Some say unnecessary hospital- helping where the problems are, ization is being reduced and money and not getting in other people's is being saved," Carpenter said. way," Carpenter explained. However, others feel that hospital HMOs, a new concept in medical resources are not being used care, have been springing up in effectively. Carpenter is hoping for a federal grant and financial support from the state in order to get the pro- gram in operation some time in 1973. The success of the program would also depend on the number of people who join. Carpenter is hoping to get at least 20,000 in- dividuals enrolled in the program in order for it to break even. State support would be especial- I"GET ATTENTION U w 13 1 /' I Residential College Writer-In-Residence Program Presents M RGE PIERCY ALL CAMPUS READING Res. College And.-TODAY 8 p.m. WOMEN WRITER'S WORKSHOP Rm. 126 East Quad TOMORROW-8:00 p.m. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED TO CANVAS FOR McGOVERN-SHRIVER SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22 CALL 761-9804 for Info. Paid Political Advertisement "THEOSOPHY AND PARAPSYCHOLOGY" PUBLIC TALK BY DR. RICHARD W. BROOKS Associate Professor-Philosophy Department Oakland University FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20-7:30 P.M. Ann Arbor Public Library-Meeting Room PRESENTED BY THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY I I JiIl (Continued from Page 1) in the event, as will Radio King, and John Sinclair. Plans call for a "troll parade" with "1,000 little trolls, Maybe on roller skates," according to Drew Sparks, a parade organizer. Local bars, area high school bands, and tap dance studios, are being asked to "do their thing" in the Oct. 27 procession. There will be prizes awarded to the best floats. The winner re- ceives a fun-filled weekend for three at the Hawaiian Gardens restaurant and motel in Holly, Michigan. The runners-up receive respectively: 12 cartons of cig- arettes, a fifth of Jack Daniels, and a champagne breakfast for one at the Fleetwood Diner in downtown Ann Arbor. Culmination of this year's festivi- ties will be the crowning of a Homecoming Queen. Although his or her identity is unknown, sources said she will be flown in from one of the coasts of a large democratic country in the Western hemisphere. For entry applications or more information, contact Ozone Central at 769-4623 from 5 to 7. ,. 1 " " !; f' ' ,-. - ,. f Use Daily Classifieds A Bummer We were going single file Through his rice paddies And the farmer Started hitting the lead track With a rake He wouldn't stop The TC went to talk to him And the farmer Tried to hit him too So the tracks went sideways Side by side Through the guy's fields Instead of single file Hard On, Proud Mary Bummer, Wallace, Rosemary's Baby The Rutgers Road Runner And Go Get Em-Done Got Em Went side by side Through the fields If you have a farm in Vietnam And a house in hell Sell the farm And go home OBSCENITIES BY MICHAEL CASEY Winner of The Yale Younger Poet Series 1972 award, Obscenities by Michael Casey is a poetic record of an American soldier's tour in Viet- namese hell. U of M SKI (LUB-UAC TRAVEL MASS MEETING UNION BALLROOM TODAY, OCT. 17 7:30 P.M. FILMS Sign Ups For: XMAS TRIP TO STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, COLO. TRIP LEADER: HERB TRUTE (TEL. 769-2919) SPRING BREAK TRIP TO ASPEN, COLO. TRIP LEADER: JACKIE DAUNT (TEL. 764-2685) UAC-TRAVEL M-F 10-5-763-2147 Now available in paperback from ® WARNER PAPERBACK LIBRARY. 950 Po t '" . I FOR THOSE WHO MISSED IT THE FIRST TIME ... Slide Talk on Mainland China C HI-SHUN YIH Stephen P. Timoshenko, University Professor of Mechanics RETUR of f: NATIVE ' IW # . I