Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom E Mtt a . Iati SHADES OF GRAY Cloudy tomorrow with a chance of showers. High in the 50s. Vol. XCI, No. 142 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, March 26, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages Plus Supplement VD: A By DENISE FRANKLIN It's on the increase because pre-marital sex is becoming more frequent among young people. Severe cases can lead to sterility and blindness, and only the common cold affects more people annually. Last year, the University Health Service Venereal Disease Clinic tested about 1,500 students for gonorrhea and syphilis. The clinic, which is funded by Washtenaw County, tested a total 3,695 people last year for VD. Sixty-eight percent of those tested were males. CRAIG ROSEY, DIRECTOR of the Washtenaw County Venereal Disease Clinic, says although at present VD is under control in this area, the disease is reaching epidemic proportions in other parts of the worry for country. In 1980, 1,071,000 Americans were treated for VD, he said. "Prevention of VD can be very simple," explains Rosey. "Just don't have sex." BUT ROSEY SAYS he realizes that abstention from America's most popular leisure activity is unrealistic for most people. So he suggests that con- traceptive devices, such as condoms, diaphragms, special foams, creams, and jellies should be used to prevent the disease from spreading to others. "Another liig part in the prevention of VD is the ability to communicate with your sex partner," Rosey added. "People are afraid to tell a partner of other relationships because it would cause a lot of emotional grief. But it only gets worse when the faith- ful partner ends up with VD." A major problem in controlling VD, Rosey says, is that its symptoms are difficult to detect in women. Only 20 percent of infected women and 80 percent to 90 percent of infected men show noticeable symptoms of the disease, he said. SYMPTOMS OF GONORRHEA - the more com- mon of the two types of VD - appear 1 to 14 days af- ter contact with an infected person, Rosey said. Sym- ptoms for women are a greenish or yellowish vaginal discharge, painful urination, or an increased frequency of urination, he said. Male symptoms in- clude painful urination and a urethral discharge. If gonorrhea is left untreated, the victim may ex- 1,500 students perience inflammation of the reproductive organs, sterility, arthritis and blindness. Syphilis is not nearly as common as gonorrhea - only 25 cases were reported in Washtenaw County last year, according to Rosey. Its symptoms, which are the same for men and women, include painless sores called chancres which look like blisters or open wounds. Chancres appear nine to 90 days after con- tact with the infected person. The sores can spread to other parts of the body, but disappear after one to five weeks. IN THE SECOND stage of the disease rashes, mouth sores, and hair loss occur, Rosey said. In this stage, the disease may be spread by merely kissing See VD, Page 7 I -I -__________________________________ MSU student dies in attempt to save others Suspected 'U' Towers arsonist arrested EAST LANSING (UPI) - A Michigan State University student would probably have survived an arson fire in her apartment building if she hadn't tried to warn other residents to flee, police said yesterday. The victim, Monalee Caswell, 21, a junior from Troy, rain from apartment to apartment beating on doors to warn residents of a fire Tuesday night at the Woodmere apartment building two blocks from campus. CASWELL'S BODY was found later in a stairwell. Police said she died of smoke inhalation. Lt. Tom Hendricks of the East Lan- sing police department said Caswell probably would have lived if she had, either remained in her apartment or fled the building. Four residents and eight police of- ficers suffered smoke inhalation in the fire. The residents were admitted to Sparrow Hospital in Lansing; the of- ficers were treated and released. NINE OTHER residents of the four- story, 28-unit building escaped without injury, police said. Damage to the building was estimated at $150,000. Fire chief Jack Gregg said the Woodmere fire and a second one at another apartment building about a block away were deliberately set and "definitely related." No suspects were in custody, police said. INVESTIGATORS SAID fires were set in at least two areas in the Wood- mere - the laundry room and a stair- well. The second fire raced up the stairwell through all four stories. There were no injuries in the second apartment building fire. Police said the blaze was contained to a basement trash bin. Fire fighters said they came agonizingly close to rescuing Caswell from the burning building. COLLEAGUES SAID one fire fighter, Dan Purtill, was "all broken up" because he almost reached the heroic young woman at one point, but could not grab her or her clothing due to the intense heat and smoke.'. Purtill wasone of eight East Lansing firefighters who were overcome by smoke while trying to rescue apar- tment residents. With MSU students on spring vacation, only nine of the building's 28 apartments were occupied. Dan Bloomquist, an MSU student taking care of the building during the break, said residents "kind of took it lightly at first" when they heard war- ning bells. He said when he finally opened his door and saw smoke, he yelled, "It's the real thing." Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS No business-like defense Former Secretary of Defense Harold Brown gives military management pointers to Business Administration graduate students in yesterday's McInally lecture. Brown said the American military cannot be managed like an ordinary business because conflicting pressures will always limit its peacetime efficiency. See story, Page 3. Rising crime rate snarls early aroles By MARK GINDIN A person suspected of setting more than a dozen.trash fires at the Univer- sity Towers apartment complex over the past three weeks will be arraigned in district court this afternoon, police said yesterday. lgolice spokesmen confirmed that a suspect had been arrested yesterday afternoon about an hour after the latest fire had been set, but declined to provide any further information pen- ding the arraignment. THERE HAVE been 14 minor fires in 19 days at the apartment building, ac- cording to one source who lives in the building. Fire Department Battalion hief Henry Mallory estimated yester- ay that his men had been called to the building, located at South University and South Forest Avenues, about 15 times. A maintenance worker at the apar- tment building said he had lost count of the number of times the fire depar- tment had responded to alarms in the building. "This is their second home," he said, adding that yesterday's fire was the first in about a week. The fires themselves, all of which were confined to the trash rooms on several floors, caused no major damage other than water damage from the sprinkler systems, and evacuation of the building's nearly 600 occupants. THERE HAVE been fires on the eighth, twelfth, fourteenth, and fifteen- th floors, according to one resident. "The first couple were scary, but now I don't even pay attentien them," he said. "I am becoming paranoid about it," said Alden Peterson, a resident of the fourteenth floor where most of the fires have occurred. Another resident said he was concer- ned about the number of false alarms the trash fires have caused. "What bothers me the most is now I tend not to believe the fire alarms," he said. BECAUSE OF the arson attempts, University Towers has taken several precautions. Signs have been posted on elevators requesting that any knowledge about the fires be phoned in to authorities. Also, residents must meet guests at the door of the building after 8 p.m. Trash bins are emptied frequently and garbage may only be deposited in the closets between noon and 7 p.m. University Towers General Manager John Ladd declined to comment on the arrest of the suspect. LANSING (UPI) - Efforts to ease prison crowding through early release of about 1,000 inmates are being coun- tered by a rising rate of violent crime, state Corrections Director Perry Johnson said yesterday. Johnson said it is "pretty obvious" a prison count scheduled for today will trigger a new emergency law requiring sentence reductions to reduce crowding. Actual releases are expected to begin sometime next month following parole hearings. JOHNSON SAID with new facilities opening soon, he hopes the release will solve the crowding problem at least un- til next year and perhaps the year after, but expressed concern over an unan- ticipated rise in violent crime which is producing a higher incarceration rate than had been expected. The veteran prison official conceded any release program is not without See RISING, Page 3 Fed-up merchants close for a day in tax revolt NASHVILLE, Mich. (AP) - M chants fed up with taxes decked the selves in black ribbons yesterday, to to the streets and shuttered their sho declaring small business has h enough. "We're gonna show big governm we're tired of this," declared Ah Jordan, vice president of the Chaml of Commerce and organizer of the o day protest. "WE CLOSED 53 of 58 businesses s_ a T _ _ f _ _ _. _ t __ _ _ _ _ t _ ._ t :er- theday," Jordan said proudly, and THE PROTEST IN the southern m- among the ranks of the closed shops Michigan village of about 1,600 people, ok was his Corner Farm Markets. about 120 miles west-northwest of ps, The aim of "Tax Strike Day," Jordan Detroit, was sparked by proposed in- ad said, "was to call attention to Michigan creases in assessments that, in some taxes, which he said are killing the bud- cases, would double property taxes. ent iness climate. The higher assessments resulted mo In just the past three weeks, a filling from strict enforcement by local ber station operator and a refrigeration- assessors of a state law requiring that ne- business owner packed up and moved to property be assessed tt 50 percent of its the sunny business climes of Florida, market value, explained Phyllis for Jordan said.u See TOWN, Page 3 'AP Photo MERCHANTS AND CITIZENS of Nashville, Mich. shut down operations yesterday to march down Main Street in-a mass protest against, increased property taxes. Almost every shop in the south-central lower Michigan village of 1,600 people was closed to mark "Tax Strike Day." 'v".v. . ..-.-.- w ....f f.'.... . . . . . . ..} t ::C "t4} ::: .... v v;;v ":v v,.. v.. . i..v.. . . ........ . . . ...vi:"i: ..; : ........... .v::.v:.:......:......:.:v~.;:::. ..:.......... .v.. .. 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"..........."....d....... v... ...: ... x..v .... .............. v...,..: ....:nr... ,. v. ................:. :....::::.:.....v. :::. .".t...v.........,.......... }{.".W.::.. y"r:. : :"i:n:.; }::......:.yii :.v ' .:."l r ::4 ..................................... . ........ .. ..............,. ...... ... ... ...... .............. ....,. _ _ .. ... ...... .............. ,.:as.. ... Night Owl till 2 a.m._ F YOU LIKE staying at the Undergraduate Library until the crack of dawn but don't relish the thought of walking home, the Night Owl bus service may have some good news: service hours have been extended until 2 a.m., when the UGLI shuts down for the night. The free bus service previously made its last run at 12:30 a.m., but due to student demand, the bus began running 1 hours later yesterday morning. Karen Goodburne, who helped initat4+a -Eirw a .fA hii,,-4,,i- tiV 'aA t. . postage stamp supply get low in anticipation of the in- crease, leading to the long lines, as well as "terrific business in self-service vending equipment." He said the public is aware of the increase and there have been few complaints about the rate hike. Tschiltz added that sales of 3-cent stamps and 18-cent stamps have been evenly divided, at least at the main post office on Stadium: People planning on waiting until after the rush should remember that the U.S. Postal Service is already talking of another increase because they say 18 cents isn't enough. They had originally requested a rate hike to 20 cents F (;amnu.4 toathhru. h: don't think this was." Bice Clemow, a vice chairman of the regents, said it was "not a distinguished piece." However, there was one harsh reaction to the rejection. "Oldenberg is a major sculptor and this clearly is a minor league town," complained faculty member Bernard Hanson. E Let's make a deal When Bob Gorham placed a brief classified ad in the Olympia, Wash. Daily Olympian, he got something he didn't bargain for-a lot of calls from people interested in wife swapping. But actually Gorham, 68, who doesn't have a wife , didn't have.that in mind atal1 hen h.a n1, na r tax bill, but not in the usual way. He wants to pay more than the city asked. Edmond, a 30-year-old computer program- mer, recently received an automobile excise tax bill of $86.25 from the city of Waltham, but he increased the amount to $135 and told the city to keep the change. "I'm impressed with the protection I've received since moving here," Edmond said of city fire and police service. "They're here when you need them." He classified his political philosophy as "libertarian" and he's basically against taxes except for necessary government service. But he says fair is fair. "As an apartment dweller, I felt I was receiving more services than I'm being asked to pay C C