MONTAGNARD REFUGEES, who have already fled their homes numerous times, runc tum street, after North Vietnamese gunners shelled the battered city yesterday ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN U.S. planes hit Hanoi, Haiphong: top advisor dies SAIGON 1"- -American warplanes battered the edges of Hanoi and Haiphong this week with the most concentrated bombing of North Vietnam's military heartland in more than four years, U.S. officials said yesterday. The officials also announced yesterday the death of John Paul Vann, 47, in a helicopter crash. Vann, the senior U.S. advisor in the central highlands and considered the top American expert on pacification, became the highest ranking civilian to die in the Vietnam war. Vann was named senior adviser in the 2nd military region 13 months ago, after several years in the Mekong Delta where he earned a high reputation for his success in pacification in the countryside. The strikes Thursday used laser-directed 2 000- and 3,00- pound bombs and were followed . by saturation raids by 30 or more B52s in the southern pan- handle. Fighter-bombers struck at ~oc c least 200 times, collapsing rail down a on bridges 25 miles from China leaving a barracks and ware- house complex near Hanoi in flames and exploding a Hai- :;"..C phong fuel depot, officials said "It was one of our most effec- tive days over Hanoi," an Air Force officer said. The raids used far more sophisticated bombs-with accuracy up to five feet - than explosives dropped during President Lyn- Joln Paid (nn don Johnson's 1965-1968 cam- paign. In South Vietnam, the U.S. Soc ll Se(Utitv : Command said, tactical aircraft Page Three made nearly 400 strikes Thurs- * day, including heavy bombing by raise I'esflcteU B52s to support ground troops. It was a marked increase in the Conservatives on the Senate raids after several days of bad Finance Committee succeeded weather. yesterday in holding a general South Vietnamese spokesmen increase in Social Security ben- said waves of helicopters man- fits to 10 per cent. aged to fly into the besieged However, Chairman Russel provincial capital of An Loc, 60 Long (D-La.) pointed out that miles from Saigon, and shuttle 64 of the Senate's 100 members, out wounded on Friday. It was including himself, have an- the biggest evacuation since nounced they will vote for a 20 communist troops cut off the per cent increase when the town 64 days ago soon after body considers the bill. am he added, starting their offensive into When the House voted on the inction, not so South Vietnam, officers said. bill last year, it approved only e persons, but The air strikes in North Viet- a 5% boost. But Rep. Wilbur selors," a term nam were the third heavy raids Mills (D-Ark.) chairman of the heir active role in three days along the Hanoi- Ways and Means Committee dents. Haiphong axis. The B52s struck who will head the House con- en voiced that just north of the demilitarized ferees on the legislation, has School will be- zone Thursday and followed up since said that he favors 20 g ground for yesterday by dropping hundreds per cent and that financing for t make it at a of tons of bombs on war ma- it is available. h school. Bode- terial awaiting shipment into The increase would be made nted out that South Vietnam, officials said. retroactive to June 1. Saturday, June 10, 1972 News Phote: 764-0552 WORK-STUDY APPROACH: Innovalive Corn unily Hi Scolpasopening in r t U a 3 7 t' . ti Y By DAVID STOLI Scheduled to open this fall, High School (CHS)' is designed to get the student out of the classroom and into the com- munity at-large. Its most obvious innovation is the community resource course, a work-study opportunity in any of several hundred areas of local Ann Arbor endeavour. The Community High School is not a vocational training cen- ter. It offers all the conventional courses which Huron and Pio- neer High Schools offer. But as an alternative to the usual high school experience, CHS aims, to set each student in a wide vari- ety of learning opportunities throughout the community. Dean Bodley, dean of the new school, said that approximately 100 people have volunteered to be community resources, while 30 teachers have applied for the 18 available teacher-counselor positions. 483 students have en- rolled. Community High School has been compared by many to the year-old Pioneer II school. Both assume a "learning by doing" approach to education and at- tempt to individualize their pro- grams in order to meet each student's needs and desires. The two differ, however, in the degree to which they are structured. Pioneer II tends to rely on the individual direction of each student; little formal curriculum planning; and the use of teachers as resource per- sos. Coimmunity High School, on the other hand, said Bodley. "is a structured school." The edu- cational experience will be "closely monitored" and "regu- larly evaluated" in order to im- prove the progrt The staff will fu much as resourc as "teacher-couin which indicates t in guiding the stu Fears have be' Community High come a dumpin anyone who can' conventional higi Iv however, poi 'U' offei Russian poet a e pos of poet-in-residence The Uti versity has offered a had "no useful work" and sen- renoswned Russian poet, Iosif tenced to five years at hard Brodsky, a position at the Uni- labor in a labor camp. He was versity. If Brodsky accepts, lie freed after 18 months. will become the University's Very little of BI dsky's own poet-irs-residence, toth ias ben subliihed ttopcnly Brodsky, a controversial fig- in the Soviet tliin. siodsky is ure iti Russia, left the Soviet also well lots iss'ii a translator Union last Monday because the of English, i uodern American, authorities there had suppressed andIrih lisets rit his writings. "We'ii vies excited that this He is presently in Vienna and vytalinteds poet will be con- should be arriving at the Uit- ttie, a position here," said versity in two weeks to uoisider "rank ritd'Rhods, Literary College the position. He has also beets Dtai. "If lie accepts, he will be offered an appointment in the a tremendous campus resource. department of Slavic languages We hope he'll be conducting and literature, seminars, offering readings of Brodsky has had a very diffi- his and other's poetry and cult time with Soviet authori- teaching courses in creative ties for nearly ten years. In writing. He'll'" also be able to 1064, he was convicted of being give all of us a unique perspec- "an idler and a parasite" who tive on Soviet society." enrollment is voluntary. In ad- dition. the students must meet the same requirements as at Pioneer and Huron High schools. Minority enrollment in CHS is " for the first year. Bodley tliinks that among the students sho have signed up for CHS is a"witde rtange of past academic performance in the conventional schools. He does not regard CHS as an option only for the stu- dests who are not going to col- lege or who have riot done well in conventional studies. Students are coming to Com- munity A igh School for a variety of reasons. Margaret Loomis. a senior. said, "A lot of us are expecting CIIS to " on a more personal level. I m lookiig for a closer relationship between teachers tnd students." She also expects more opportunities for "going it on your own, doing thinshs by yourself and for your- self." Cindy Smith, junior said, "I'ms ex-cting a lot more stu- dewt determination of what we do- nct o many teachers with uipls over yoga." Cindy's sister Kathy, a so'ior, saidthat CS will, if anythisg, imov is' 'iih'r chanes of getti'" itori the col's tlste of her choice. "I'm taking all the college prep courses I would normally take, but at CHS I'll also be doing things that broaden my inter- ests" Donald Newsted, a teacher at Huron High, however, doubted that enough time has gone into See STUDENTS Pa e 12 i {C ii bist Police raid Dodge State Park near Pontiac Thursday looking for drug violations. They arrested 19 persons, but only three were for drug offenses. These three seaworthy freaks slip away before the police used tear gas to break up th unruly crowd.