SGC: REEFER MADNESS? See Editorial Page Y drt i9iau &titl ACCUMULATIVE High-33 Low- 19 See today . .. for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 71 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sturday, December 2, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages today... if you see news happen caff 76-DAILY God is alive God is alive at the University-sort of. The Office of Re- ligious Affairs says 9,381-or 31 per cent-of University students indicated a religious preference on their registration cards. Ro- man Catholicism led the list with 3,053 respondents, followed by Judaism, 1,752; Lutheran, 689; Methodist, 680; Presbyterian, 556; and other Protestant, 464. Still other students put downj African Methodist, Agnostic, Apostolic, Atheist, Bokononist, Church of England, Druid, Humanist, Jehovah's Witness, Pagan, Pantheism, Pentecostal, Salvation Army, Taoist, Word of God and Zoroastrian. Happenings .. . ..what at first seemed like a dull day turns into a veritablej wealth of activity . . . For early risers, the police are holding a bicycle auction at 10 a.m. at the police garage behind City Hall . . . The Israeli Students Union is sponsoring an informal gathering to sing, eat and talk at 7 p.m. at 936 Dewey . American Indians Unlimited are feasting and holding a bazaar from 10 to six at 331 Thompson . . . the Ann Arbor Ski Club is showing Ski Movie I at 7:30 in the Pioneer High School audi- torium . . . and today is your last chance to contribute to the Galens Society bucket drive to benefit children at the C. C. Mott Children's Hospital. Mass transit deadlock LANSING-The State Senate deadlocked yesterday on a pro- posal to earmark one-half cent of a two-cent per gallon gasoline tax for mass transit systems. However, Gov. William Milliken said he is encouraged about the prospects of the package gain- ing approval when a second vote is taken during the week of Dec. 11. The second vote was put off a week as the legislature is adjourning becarse about one-fourth of its members will be in Miami Beach for national legislative meetings of one sort or another. ,. McCartney banked in Britain LONDON-Former Batle Paul McCartney may be flying high with his new group, Wings, but according to the publicly- owned British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC), the musicians have just laid their second egg. First BBC banned the group's release -"Give Ireland Back to the Irish"-for obvious political reasons. And now they've banned the Wings' new song-"Hi Hi Hi." Actually, BBC only objects to one line of the song, which refers to someone on a bed getting ready for "my body gun." Actually, McCartney says, "I referred to a pollygan (sic)-though I'm not sure what that is, It just fitted. But in the transcript it came out as body gun, the BBC got it and that was it." McCartney struck back at BBC, though. At a press conference yesterday, he said there was more controversial material during one eve- ning of BBC television programs than during his song. On BBC, he says, "You can see a nude a night-if you're lucky." I was a teenage vampire SAN FRANCISCO-If you're still munching on your break- fast, don't read this. An English professor here claims to have discovered a genuine, walking, talking, blood-drinking vampire. The professor, Leonard Wolf, said he found the vampire through a classified ad he placed in a newspaper. He came up with a 22-year-old vampire called Alex who said he had been turned on to blood drinking by friends on a drug trip. Shortly after- wards, Alex got married and, during his honeymoon, Alex frightened his bride with his blood lust. "It happened by acci- dent during our love making," Alex told the professor. His bride left him the next day. Wolf said, "Alex told me he has found at least 50 co-operative donors here-both male and female-- with little trouble." . . . We don't believe a word of it. The game of love ENGLAND-Lonely people in London were disappointed yes- terday when a neighborhood sex shop was fined 105 pounds (about $280) for selling a potentially harmful love potion. Offi- cials say the potion, called libido six, did stimulate the sex drive, but it also stimulated other body glands causing a hormone im- balance. Meanwhile, the English town of Derby experienced a run on herring after a Japanese lecturer said that herrings make you beautiful, brainy, and sexy. Keiko Smith, who graduated at Tokyo University, told an adult education class, "Every Japanese knows that eating herring makes a girl sexier and more pas- sionate. Take my word, it works." Could fish markets put Masters and Johnson out of business? I' _ 'U, counseling strives for By JUDY RUSKIN Many University students complain that LSA academic counseling policies are archaic - "the same old garbage" that it's always been. But some small and unassuming changes have been made, with bigger and perhaps better plans in the making for the future. Charles Morris, appointed last No- vember as associate dean in charge of counseling, said his office's strategy "was to solve critical problems imme- diately." "We know what the problems are and we have the alternative solutions, some of which have already been implement- ed," he said in describing his office's activities in the past year. "We are not really out to suddenly change the entire face of counseling. There are some things that are now being done effectively, and others that are not. We want to keep what is good," he added. Morris' solutions to counseling prob- lems have centered on counseling for freshmen and sophomores. The major thrust of these changes have been small experimental programs that do not re- quire major commitments of funds. "The assumption is if each one (pro- gram) is successful on a small run ba- sis, it is expanded," Morris said. A dorm-based counseling system init- iated last year by the Pilot Program is an example. The system includes a staff of paid student counselors under the sup- ervision of a faculty member. Two similar, but not identical dorm- based counseling programs, have been set-up in Mosher-Jordan and Couzens this fall. These and other experimental pro- grams however do not affect the major- ity of the students using the Underclass Advising Office. Student complaints about counseling deal with the impersonal quality of the system and its lack of accurate informa- tion. "It's standardized. The counselors don't show any real interest in you", one freshman commented. "They don't know anything," a sopho- more stated. "They can never answer my questions. All they ever do is call the head of the department. I could do that myself. The question is, what do they do?" Morris' system - wide programs have centered around eliminating much of the technical information - giving services provided by counselors and concentrate on a more personal form of counseling. Changes affecting the entire under- class system have been less obvious. The change emphasis has been on freeing counselors from some of the more procedural tasks. For example, advanced classification is now being done on a group counseling basis, a change from the former coun- selor-student sessions. Mame Jackson, director of underclass advising, sees these innovations as giving counselors "more time to talk to those who want to come in." "Some of these changes aren't all that dramatic," she said, "but they free-up time for individual counseling." Change has been slower in the junior- senior counseling office. Morris' office has only indirect control over the upper- class counseling. The counselors are fur- nished by the individual departments and in many instances are not paid. Be- See COUNSELING, Page 8 Charles Morris: 'Human counseling' Schult guide to Nixon econ. polic By the Associated Press, UPI and Reuters KEY BISCAYNE-George Schultz has oeen asked to re- main as secretary of the treasury in the Nixon administration and to assume chief responsibility for coordinating all economic policy, the Florida White House announced yester- day. Also keeping their posts are Herbert Stein, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers and Peter Flanigan, director of the Council on International Policy. Schultz takes on a role in the economic arena comparable to the high level adviser responsibilities that Henry Kissinger has in the field of national security affars. The treasury secretary wll head the new Council on Economic Policy, which will be made up of secretaries of labor, commerce, agriculture, ®_ - q , -R- -.----- AP Photo Registering to vote Labor department officials look on as a Kentucky coal miner registers to vote in the United Mine Workers election. The UAW election is reported to be the most carefully watched in labor history. (See story, Page 2.) ANN ARBOR SURVEY: Study shows drug euato transportation and state, as. well as the head of the Office of Management and Budget, Council of Economic Advisers, Cost of Living Council and the Council on International Eco- nornic Policy. Presidential press secretary Ron Ziegler said, "Schultz will be the focal point and the overall coor- dinator of the entire economic pol- icy and decision-making process, both domestically and internation- ally." Tuition challenge, oS tponed A lawsuit intending to equalize out-of-state and in-state student tuition was postponed yesterday may con tribute to drug usage By LORIN LABARDEE Do students who take drug education courses increase their usage of drugs? A recently re- leased study by a University pro- fessor indicates they do. On the inside Sports writer Art Feldman advances today's Michigan- Notre Dame basketball game . .. Daily guest writer Robert A recent experiment with 935 Wilson describes the trials, tribulations and frustrations of Ann Arbor junior high school attempting to take books out of the library on the students shows that the students Editorial Page . . . RC Player's productions of "Miss given a ten week drug education Julie" and "The Dumbwaiter" are reviewed by Night course increased their use of Editor Jan Benedetti on the Arts Page. marijuana, LSD, and alcohol. The number of students who sold The weather picture marijuana and LSD also in- Weather watchers tell us to look out for snow late this creased after the course. afternoon, -and there's a 50-50 chance they may be right. The study, conducted by Social The afternoon high will be 33, the evening low, 19. Aren't Work Prof. Richard Stuart, indi- you glad football season ended last week? cates that with more knowledge about drugs, the students lost many of the fears that had pre- Students at U of D demand reinstatement of fired faculty 11 viously scared them from taking drugs. The students were divided into two groups. Two-thirds of the seventh and ninth graders re- ceived an extensive drug educa- tion course while the other stu- dents had no drug education at all. The study was based on ques- tionnaires filled in by the stu- dents before the course, immedi- ately after it, and again during a later follow-up. The results showed that those students who had participated in the drug program were less con- cerned about drug usage now than they had been before the program and were more inclined to try drugs than those who did not receive drug education. According to the reports use of grass went up 36 per cent, use of LSD went up 22 per cent, and use of alcohol increased 22 per cent among seventh graders following the education program. Among ninth graders use of grass went up 30 per cent, use of LSD went 20 per cent, and use of alcohol increased 14 per cent. The group that received no drug education showed only a slight increase in drug consump- tion. The drug education course also had an effect on the number of students who sold drugs. The re- port shows that the number of students who admitted selling marijuana increased from about nine per cent to about 14 per At least 24 states require some form of drug or alcohol educa- tion. The city's own drug education program in the schools is not highly organized. Bill Stuart, public information officer for *he schools, said each school runs its own program according to guide- lines that were set up about two years ago. Ted Heusel, president of the Board of Education, said that de- spite the study he still believes drug education should be a viable part of the education curriculum. He maintained, "I think the more knowledge kids get about drugs, the better off they are." He did say however that the current system of education would be investigated and would probably be renovated. He stress- ed a need for instructors that are better educated in the drug field. The 51-year-old cabinet official until Dec. 14. Under present tuition will become one of the most power- scales this would cost the Univer- ful men in government during sity over $12 million. President Nixon's second term. The class action suit was filed The new council will weigh, sift againstathe Regents last spring on and ruminate about economic is- behalf of the University's 7,604 out- sues to provide the President with of-state students. The suit's intent the widest possible variety of view- is to force the University to stop points, Schultz said. charging higher tuition to out-of- He said it will also try to "be state students. creative and put together pieces In court, yesterday, University in a new way." Attorney Roderick Dane and Ar- "When it comes to matters of thurCarpenterkattorney for the moment," Schultz reminded report- students, agreed to limit the case ers, "it is the President's decision to only the Ann Arbor campus of that is the final and real decision." the University. Before entering the Nixon cabi- Carpenter also decided to focus net, Schultz was dean of the Gradu- his case on the University policy ate School of Business at the Uni- of prohibiting those entering the versity of Chicago and he is an University as non-residents from expert in the areas of industrial ever becoming residents while at- and labor relations and economics. tending school. In other administration news, Out-of-state students pay $2,260 Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kansas) who a year in tuition while in-state stu- See SCHULTZ, Page 8 dents pay only $680. By REBECCA WARNER About fifty students and faculty of the Univer- sity of Detroit picketed a U of D Law School alumni dinner last night to protest the unexplained firings of four sociology department faculty mem- bers. Despite bad weather, the demonstrators carried signs and handed out leaflets for almost two hours outside Cobo Hall,. where former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg crossed the picket line to speak to a $30 a couple fund raiser attend- ed by 300 guests. Protest spokespersons said the Admonstraionwn intended tn he "informativ ." ment. In a related action, Smith went to court yester- day morning to try to obtain an injunction against his demotion. At issue was Smith's contention that since his contract with the U of D names his position as "assistant professor and Chairman of the Depart- ment of Sociology and Social Work," the demo- tion represented a breach of contract. U of D attorneys argued that an injunction was not appropriate after the fact of the demotion. The defense also claimed that university pro- I _faml 0 W .:r>..VEN&..... }nNW