Thursday, February 24, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Apathy plague Course Mar DAILY DIGEST' FEBRUARY 24, 1977 m i( By PAULINE TOOLE 'i -I-" Course Mart, once the supermarket of academia, has recent- Efl ernaLional ly fallen victim to student disinterest and now more closelyj resembles a struggling corner grocery. .. Six years ago, when its classes were introduced, students Idi A Milfl gobbled up Course Mart's 30 offerings -the results of a plan U to liberate academia with a fresh array of supplemental courses. UGANDA - President I d i TODAY, HOWEVER, falling enrollment has shrunk Course alleged plot he crushed 1 a s t Mart to a mere ten offerings, week was to have climaxed "Course Mart enrollment reflects the attitudes of the cam- with an airborne landing of pus," contended Joan Woodward, administrator of the program. paratroopers from the United She tied the early, enthusiastic response toward the courses to States, Britain or Israel. student activism of the late 1960's. Amin told correspondents that "When students were uneasy, a lot of them enrolled in -16 persons arrested for a r m s Course Mart classes," said Woodward. "Now the students are smuggling in connection with the plot had disclosed under inter- more satisfield. It's sort of political." .lotn that the uprising was "THE ENROLLMENT in Course Mart is just peanuts com- troh stha with the assassi- pared to enrollments in the rest of the cellege," she continued. nation of prominent Ugandan "Course Mart provides some spice in the standard education pro- leaders. cess. The whole thing (enrollment) is cyclical. We'll just have In the ensuing turmoil, para- to let it happen." troopers were to fly in from an Course Mart offerings this term incldde such diverse topics aircraft carrier of undisclbsed as "Dimensions of Human Aging", "The Asian-American Exper- nationality and capture several ience," "The-Gay Experience" and "The Struggle for Zimbabwe." towns in Uganda, he said. Students are hard pressed to explain why they have never Amin did not elaborate on this' elected a Course Mart offering. For many, it is a lack of time. hether heanbelievewas unear For a large number, it is ignorance about the program's exist- three nations were directly n- ence. volved in the coup attempt. The: FOR OTHERS, HOWEVER, it is the quest for classes that U.S. carrier Enterprise, part of will be graded and will appear in a better light- on graduate the U.S. Navy's Indian Ocean and professional school applications. A non-traditional, pass-fail fleet, left the Kenyan port ofi course just doesn't fit the bill. Mombassa on Wednesday afterl "I want to take electives that will look good on my tran- a five-day visit. d script," explained one student. "I need graded courses - not A U.S. State Department the kind offered 'by Course Mart." spokesman termed "absurd" al- Wookdward yiCore t specificrealegations that the United States Woodward piinpointed two specific reasons why the 1977 was supporting a plot aimed at student tends to shy away from Course Mart offerings - ignor- Amin. No comment was immed- ance about the program and lack of interest in the subject iately available from British or matter._ Israeli spokesmen. "WHY IS COURSE MART enrollment shrinking? Oh, I In Dar es Salaam, the ca;,ital don't know. I-never even heard of it," student Carol Schieb said. of neighboring Tanzania, a group "Maybe that's why more students don't enroll in it - they don't gof22 refugeesdarriving from know it exists." Uganda claimed Amin had Nelse Espasses, a junior transfer student, explained her at- launched a nationwide massacre of two predominantly hristian titude toward Course Mart. "I was going to take one of their tribes, the Langi and Acholi, he courses. I went to one lecture. It looked like it required a lot believed were 'central to the of time, the reading list was long, the time demand too much. coup attempt. So I took a course in the psychology department instead." This tine about a deo off:- cers dragged AmalriK across the street and puiled him aa. he 50 yards to the sidewalk were he' took up a vigil. About 5>0 othey persons later joined htn there. "I was struck by the harsh- ness with which the Frerch po- lice pushed me and tome away my placard," Amalrik told re- porters. "My action is complete- ly within 1'he norms of tree cour- tries. "The attitude of the p hce. in my opinion, is comole-et zecn:- parable to that of tne KG3 in Moscow, which sometimes shows more prudence when journalists are presa it." About a half-mile awa, on the Champs Elysees, riot p o l i c e guarded the office of the Soviet airline Aeroflot against flower- tossing demonstrators marking the suicide by fire °f a voung anti-Soviet demonstru"r in the office last week. National Hunt released 1 Hunt had been sentenced to 30 months to eight years in pri- son after pleading guilty to con- spiracy, burglary aiid Ilegal wiretapping in the Waergatel break-in.I His release was autnorized by the U.S. Parole Commission last week after he paid a $10,000 fine. ;rhe first word of Hunt's re- lease came when a prison offi- cial read a brief statement to reporters outside the gat. After hearing the statement, reporters saw a prison laundry truck speeding from the prison gate. They followed it, believing that Hunt - who had worked as a laundry clerk - might be inside.I However, they lost the truck about one mile from the prison. Prison official Dave Swyhart said later Hunt had left the pri- son at 4 a.m. in a car driven by prison workers, and the an- nouncement was deayed two hours. Prison officials apparent- lv used a side exit for Hu"ss release. $1 million heist YONKERS, N.Y. - Two rob- bers who invaded the Hudson Valley National Bank here made off with .more than $1 million, an FBI agent said yesterday. It was one of the biggest bank robberies in U.S. history. Bank officials refused to say how much was taken, but Rob- ert Besley, the agent in charge of the FBI office in nearby New Rochelle, said, "It is safe to as- sume that more than $1 million wastaken. Besley said all the money de- posited by Yonkers Raceway at the bank from its three-day hol- iday weekend of races was stolen Tuesday morning. A bank official confirmed Besley's statement. "They knew what they were after.," Besley said of the rob- bers. Besley confirmed earlier rpt from a track account- ant that the raceway's deposits ' included about $700,000 in daily operating cash - money de- posited each night and with- drawn before the next day's races. He estimated the track's share of the money bet on the three racing nights in question would exceed $500,000 and that there would have been additional mon- ey from such things as horse- men's fees. Using Besley's calculations, that would mean the track's weekend deposit could easily exceed $1.2 million. Some sources, including fed- eral authorities, indicate that if the amount of cash involved ap- proaches or exceeds $1 million, it would be the biggest cash rob- t bery of a bank in U.S. history. There have been bigger non- cash bank robberies, including the theft of $3.3 million in jew- els and other valuables from a Southern California bank in 1972. Besley said the bandits car- ried their loot from the bank I in two large duffel bags, the t type generally used to carry baseball bats. In a joint statement, JohnI Pratt, bank president, and Sid- ney Thompson, bank chairman, said that no accounts of any depositors were affected by the robbery. Alphonse J. Cerrato, agent for the Continental Insurance Group, said the entire loss is covered by the bank's insurance policy.; He said the bank should have a check covering its loss by tomorrow. Coffee probe WASHINGTON - A federal regulatory agency announced yesterday that it is investigating possible manipulation of U.S. coffee prices by commodities brokers from foreign coffee pro- ducing countries. Officials of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission revealed the investigation dur- ing a House hearing into causes for the tripling in coffee prices during the last two years. The commission officials said they were particularly interest-, ed in commodities transactions Jan. 11 after consumer groups had organized a coffee boycott., The boycott had resulted in a decline in the price of coffee beans on the Coffee and Sugar Exchange in New York after months of steady rises. On that date "there was an influx of money from a produc- ing country" that bought 6.6 mil- lion pounds of coffee, commis- sioner John Rainbot said. Prices then resumed their rise, he said. However, Mark Powers, chief economist for the commission, added: "It is very difficult to sihow that the cause of the run- uip in prices is buying orders by accounts from producing coun- tries. They have been selling some coffee; too." The commission is' compiling data on trading by brokers from coffee producing countries to de- termine if prices have been ma- nipulated, Powers said. 4 Rainbolt said the commission does not know if the foreign brokers ultimately represent producers in the coffee export- ing nations, but he said the commission is looking into this subject. Reo. Benjamin Rosenthal, (D- N.Y.), said, "If producers can i cheaper. "should adopt legislation which would require that city char- ters, when they do prohibit State suchactivities as personal use of city-owned automobiles and 'gifts' by employers at the Kelly wants direction of the mayor or council, members, also penalize penalties those who violate orhrequire LANSING - Attorney General others to violate such provi- Frank Kelley appealed to the sions." -" Mental Health Research Institute SEMINAR SERIES PATRICIA S. GOLDMAN LABORATORY OF NEUROPSYCHOLOGY NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH BETHESDA, MARYLAND "Specificity and Plasticity of Control Function in Developing Rhesus Monkeys" THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1977 control commodity markets, legislature yesterday to include then they've got it both com- penalties or other civil reme- ing and going." dies in new laws requiring or In other testimony, the two prohibiting specific activities. leading U.S. coffee roasting Kelley said that, particularly companies said they have rats- in his recent investigation of ed prices repeatedly in recent the City of Dearborn, he was moniths because of rapid in- frustrated by finding violations creases in their costs for cof- of city charter provisions with- fee beans.-r out having authority to impose Bill Tower, president of the penalties. Maxwell House Division of Gen- eral Foods Corp., said the com- ."Too often citizens are lulled pany's recent price increases :into thinking that the same law "do not cover the current cost prohibiting an activity also of green coffee beans plus oth- punishes those who violate the er higher costs including ener- law," Kelley said in an open gy, labor and packaging." fetter to the legislature. "This, Tower promised that the price unfortunately, is not always of Maxwell House will be low- true. Bred once coffee beans become Kelley said l a w m a k e r s SEMINARS: 3:45 p.m. Room 1057 MHRI TEAS: 3:15 p.m. Room 2055 MHRI Brandeis University JACOB HIATI INSTITUTE I N I SRAEI Course Mart classes are at the 300 level. The instructors - many of whom are non-accredited teachers - receive no pay. Yet they are knowledgable in their fields and have committed themselves.to teaching. STUDENTS ARE limited to a total of 15 credit hours elected in Course Mart. "We can't ruin anyone's education," explained Woodward. Although Woodward notes that student interest is on the de- cline, she says "there hasn't been a fantastic drop in Course Mart enrollment. The courses -are small, and they are usually closed quickly." But she says the program might just nhase itself out. "That will just indicate that the needs of the students have been met;" she said. "If it phases itself out, that's cool," she added. "Hopefully, the topics will be incorporated into the regular department cur- riculum." Thinking again she mused, "the courses are offered because there is no regular department that presents that subject." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN , . r : a r : : 't:-' r: '; ;{-{ } : " :.} Dissident -harrassed PARIS - French plain-clothes-' men tangled with exiled Soviet dissident Andrei Amalrik yes- terday as he picketed the French presidential palace, prompting him to say the gend- armes were "completely c o m- parable" to the Soviet KGB. The dissident historian, w h o began his exile in the West in July 1976. carried a placard reading "Demand application of the Helsinki accords" and handed out tracts denouncing the arrests in Russia of four members of a group organized to monitor human rights pro- visions of the Helsinki agree-) ment., Amalrik's protest was promp- ted by French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing's refusal to meet him earlier this week. In an interview with a Paris news- paper, Amalrik accused Giscard d'Estaing of acting as a "Tro- jan Horse" for the Soviets in the West. The presidential palate spokes- man said political refugees such as Amalrik were free to express their opinions in France but not to set up appointments by them- 'selves with the press 1-nt of the republic. Amalrik began his protest zt about 10 a.m. and poli;e quiz1- ly seized him, tore away his placard and led hiM away to a police station. He reaurned to the Faubourg St. Honore side- walk outside the palace an hour later, refusing police orders to move. Hunt ELGIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. - E. Howaed Hunt, the convicted Watergate burglar and author of several spy nov- els, was releasedfrom a federal prison under cover of early- morning darkness yesterday in the best cloak-and-dagger tradi- tion. Hunt, 58, left the 473-man fed- eral minimum security prison on this Gulf Coast Air Force base after serving 32 months for his part in the June 1972 break in at Democratic national h e a d- ,quarters. He successfully evaded report- ers who had camped outside the jprison's main gate through the night. Ellis Rubin of Miami, Hunt's attorney, said Hunt' planned to fly to Boston, but he would not say who Hunt would visit there. Asked about reports that Hunt would be paid by a televi ion network for an interview, Rub- in said: "That will have to be announced by Howard." A program o ;tu0y* about historic and mod- ern Israel for juniors and seniors Earn 1 6 redits Opa semester Financial aid available a F or a bro ' I Application deadlifs March 15 for fall term or year program (no language requirement) November 15 'or sp rng term (elementary Hebrew required) chure or furtber information, write: Jacob Hiatt ;nstitute BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY Waltham. Massachusetts 02151W Thursday, February 24, 1977 DAY CALENDAR. WUOM: Robben Fleming speaks on "The Role of the University in the Future," sponsored by the UAC, 10 a.m. CTR. Early Childhood Develop- ment/Educ. Ctr. Human Growth, Development: Marion Blank, Dept. Psychiatry Rutgers Medical School, "Teaching Disadvantaged Children to Read," Schorling Aud., SEB, 4 p.m. CTR. Human Growth/Develop- ment: Marion Blank, Rutgers Medi- cal School, "Finding a Bit of Seren- dipity in the Land of Reading Re- tardation," Schorling Aud., SEB, 4. p.m. Guild House: Paul Hubbel, Bill Piumpe, poetry reading, 802 Mon- roe, 7 p.m. Music School: Concert Band, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. GENERAL NOTICE Two programs for people return- ing to school who would like to refresh their student skills are planned by the UM Center for Con- tinuing Education - of women. "Speeded Reading and Study Effic- iency," Feb. 28 through April 11, will focus on ways to approach reading assignments, take, notes, plan study time. "written Commu- nication" is designed to help with preparing essays, critical reviews, analytic studies and other kinds of THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 121 Thursday, February 24, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Secpnd class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i 1 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. INTER COOPERATIVE COUNCIL AFFIRMATIVE ACT ION CHECK OUT TKE CO-OPS Short Informal Talks with SLIDES Refreshments will be served SOUTH QUAD: Thurs., Feb. 24 7:30 p.m.. in the Afro Lounge MARKLEY: Wed., Mar. 2 7:30 p.r. in the Annal Davis Lounae written projects. The series is Tues- day evenings. March 1 through April 12. Each series is 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. The programs are planned with the cooperation of the UM Reading and Learning Skills Center. The registration fee is $15. Persons who are interested in registration infor- mation may contact the Center for Continuing Education of women, 328-330 Thompson Street, Ann Ar- bor 48109. (313) 763-1353. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3800 S.A.B.-764-7456 Recruiting 'on-campus February 28, 1977 to March 4, 1977. March 1-Procter & Gamble Dis- tributing Co. March 2-NCR, Travelers Ins. Co., Veterans Administration Hospital, and Provident Insurance Co. March 3-Los Alamos Scientific Laboratories, State FarmInsurance .Co., and Northwestern University/ M.A.T. Program. March 4 - State Farm Insurance Co., and Voice of America. BIVOUAC { .. . . .- t m 00-