U.S. charities suffer under federal WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's charitable organizations, called upon to help people who are losing government benefits, have been hit hard ly federal budget cuts, a private study said yesterday. The survey by Independent Sector of its 400 national public service member organizations discovered that groups which might be expected to move in with private aid were heavily depen- dent on government programs that are being pared. "It is clear that federal budget cuts impact disproportionately and severely on people already vulnerable, par- ticularly those who depend on gover- nment-supported programs," said Brian O'Connel, president of Indepen- dent Sector. IN SAN FRANCISCO, the study said, the Salvation Army's family services office is swamped by 100 requests a day for emergency aid, most of them vic- tims of cutbacks at the county welfare office. The March of Dimes in Wisconsin reported that the loss of a $65,000 grant to the Wisconsin Association for Prenatal Care, "Will be a crushing blow to prenatal care in Wisconsin." In Roanoke, Va., the city social ser- vices department reported that "frail elderly and the disabled lost companion services, 23 lost homemaker services, 12 families lost day care, five residen- tial retarded lost special services, 55 retarded adults lost employment at sheltered workshops, 464 persons with mental or emotional crises lost short- term, in-patient care..." ALTHOUGH President Reagan once suggested that the nation's voluntary cuts philanthropic groups could "take up the slack" as the government withdraws from many social services, he no longer contends that. O'Connell said his group's study discovered that "religiously affiliated social services, whether it's programs of Jewish Welfare Federations or Catholic Charities, are tremendously linked to government funding." "Catholic Charities in this country receives 55 percent of its money from government sources" through grants and contracts to carry out social programs, he said. The Independent Sector report also said there "has been an unrealistic assumption that corporate giving can somehow leap forward to assist volun- tary organizations in trouble." CORPORATIONS, like foundations, give only 5 percent of the total dollars contributed to charities each year. Ninety percent of the $53 billion in an- nual contributions comes from in- dividuals, most of whom make less than $20,000 a year. O'Connel said the study found that the Reagan administration's economic program is "unfortunately and uninten- tionally creating welfare dependency rather than building the kind of programs the president believes in to help these people pull themselves out of welfare." ". . . The cuts impact most heavily on populations already vulnerable, par- ticularly those who depend on gover- nment-supported programs relating to job training, income assistance, other social services, legal services, basic health care, housing and special sper- vices for handicapped such as special education classes," he said. I 4 4 i AP Photo Bottoms up A Suburban Salvage Company truck landed on its cab and came to rest against this telephone line Tuesday when the truck ran off the road. Three men were injured in the mishap in Monroe County. Outspoken theologian By BILL SPINDLE The University announced yesterday that world-renowned Swiss theologian Hans Kung will join the faculty in the fall of 1983. Kung, a Catholic priest who gained fame for his outspoken views on religion, will be a full-time professor for at least a term in the University's Near Eastern Studies department and the Studies on Religion program. "KUNG WILL be a great asset for the University, especially because of his viewpoints on religion and science," said Prof. Gernot Windfuhr, chairman of the Near Eastern Studies depar- tment. Kung will provide student and faculty members with a "new viewpoint" on religion, he added. Kung came to campus last November to give an address at Rackham Am- pitheater. During his visit, it was rumored that Kung had been offered a faculty position.' w According to LSA Dean Peter Steiner, Kung has agreed to teach one full academic term. His affiliation with PPG Industries' employee Bob Se the '1;u wsitywilltben ..be, openedto. terns This functional art will Ils9 negotiationteiner said, J x 60 AP Photo Man in a jamb 'ars stacks seven-foot-long door jamb components forming a myriad of geometric pat- keep Oe4Aovr open during thelng,_ho ,,sum -pt