REGISTER TO VOTE See Editorial Page LIE0 IEI ailt FORTE High-70T Low--50 See Today for details i o. LIX No. 23 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 3, 1978 Ten. Cents Ten Pages plus Suppleme as le sehool By KEVIN ROSE BOROUGH A carbon monoxide leak at Ann Arbor ommunity High School late yesterday orning forced the evacuation of the uilding and sent 86 students and staff embers to local hospitals. Three students were admitted to Mott _ospital in fair condition, said Univer- ity Hospital spokesman Joe Owsley. he other patients were treated and eleased. "PEOPLE WERE complaining of *ausea, chest pains, and burning eyes y mid-morning," said Robert Moseley, Assistant Superintendent for the Ann Arbor School District. "People at the school familiar with first aid recognized that it was a respiratory problem and advised the immediate evacuation of the school. The evacuation was completed and those feeling bad were advised to ecline and breathe the fresh air." The Ann Arbor Fire Department was jotified and rushed 20 men to the scene. 'Oxygen was administered to all,'' said tallion Lt. Russell Taylor, adding hat some at the scene were semi- 'onscious. "The building won't be eopened until the cause (of the toxic umes) is discovered." AUTHORITIES believe that the chool's furnace was the source of the umes. The school will remain closed oday so the fire inspectors can run ests on the building's heating system. ,nt ik shuts Community ;86 hospitalized The furnace passed a routine inspection on Friday, September 29. 'Jon Vogel, a student teacher in his first day at the school, said he was sit- ting in class when the evacuation notice came. "Everyone was told to get out im- mediately," he said. "A lot of people were feeling bad. One girl got sick on the lawn. Faculty members told anyone who felt bad to go to the hospital." Vogel estimated that there were 250 people in the school at the time of the evacuation. Those overcome by the fumes were transported to University Hospital, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Saline Com- munity Hospital, and Beyer Memorial Hospital in Ypsilanti. A total of 64 students succumbed to the fumes, as did 11 staff members. Eleven infants, who were in the nursery at the time of the incident, were taken immediately to the hospital. None of them were believed to have suffered any ill effects. BLOOD TESTS run on patients at University Hospital confirmed the presence of carbon monoxide in their bloodstream. "Most of them recovered quite quickly after their system was washed out with oxygen," spokesman Joe Owsley. said The highest count of carbon monoxide was recorded in the blood- stream of custodian Tom Braun, accor- ding to School District spokesman Moseley. "He went around to all the rooms three times to make sure that the evacuation was complete, and he tur- ned off the furnace." Fire department investigators will conduct a full range of tests this mor- ning at the school, located at 401 North Division. MSA suggests combined input for selection of next president By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) President Eric Arnson proposed yesterday that a joint committee of students, faculty, and alumni present one unified list of presidential nominees to the Regents in order to insure greater "leverage" for those three groups in the selection of the Univer- sity's next president. Arnson made his recommendation to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), the nine- member board set up to recommend 'policy for the University's ap- proximately 2900 faculty members. THE MSA PRESIDENT, along with MSA members Kate Rubin and Mervat Hatem, outlined a tentative proposal whereby delegates from the student, faculty, and alumni search committees would meet to narrow the number of presidential nominees presented to the Regents after the three search commit- tees had drawn up separate lists of Grif1 haunt, This is the first o eries on the campaig 'tates Senate. Tod focuses on the .c acumbent Sen. )?ober By KEITH RICH In politics, as in the c primer, anything you sa be used against you. An one is more aware of tha Robert Griffin., By most accounts, G n good shape for his bhowdown with Democ or the -US. Senate s Michigan's two-term in iscal conservative in the an, Kemp-Roth and th isch tax limitation plan. Voters in even suc states as Massachusett heir disdain for liberal the tumult of tax revolt fin 's record, 'retiring act' nominees. Arnson said that in this way the groups could "narrow the options" open to the Regents by presenting a smaller list of nominees than the thirty- four names offered separately in the last selection in 1966. "Clearly the key word here is cooperation," Rubin said. Rubin and Arnson condemned "competition" bet- ween search committees which resulted in the widely varying lists presented to the Regents in 1966. At that time, only two nominees appeared on all three search committee lists., SACUA representatives expressed enthusiasm for the MSA proposals but refused to commit the faculty search committee to a specific set of guidelines. Many members endorsed communication between the three ad- visory groups, but stressed that they would only recommend Arnson's proposals as one option the search committee could explore. "I'D RATHER SEE SACUA instruct the committee to establish liaisons with the other committees," said Physics Prof. Lawrence Jones. "I'd be a little reluctant to give the faculty a 'fait ac- See COMBINED, Page 10 Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEN ROBERT TISCH, the Shiawassee County drain commissioner who authored. Proposition J, the tax cutting proposal on the November ballot, yesterday traded insults with Richard Headlee, author of a similar tax limitation plan. Tisek, Hedlee cla'sh in Detroit i m durng close campalgn )f qtwo-part a g f a t o-partwell as me to have someone fresh comne n for United 13. There, voters ousted incumbent wl astm thav sag e one frsh coe Jay 's article Gov. Michael Dukakis, a traditional you first start out ampaign of "big spending" liberal. GRIFFIN WAS soon 'to change > rt Griffin. What's Pmore, Griffin has shown the See GRIFFIN'S. Page 7 HBURG ability to seize an emotional issue and riminals' rights transform it into votes on election day ay can and will as he did with the busing issue in 1972. d right now, no WHY THEN is Griffin having so t than U.S. Sen. much trouble - the race is called even - with an urban liberal in a time when riffin should be urban liberals are supposed to be un- popular? , UT The answer goes .back to April 1977 , I V 4#F when Griffin decided prematurely to announce his decision to retire from -- November 7 public political life. He had earlier seen rat Carl Levin his good friend Gerald Ford ousted eat. After all, from the presidency by Jimmy Carter, ncumbent is a and Griffin himself had just lost a bid f e age of Jarvis- for the minority leader's post to the ie Headlee and flashier, more photogenic Howard rS. Baker of Tennessee. Griffin was ready a :h progressive to call it quits. ts have shown "Twenty-two years in Congress is Democrats in long enough," Griffin said then. "In and proposition some ways, it is better for the state as By ELISA ISAACSON Specialto The Daily, DETROIT - Although they were perhaps more refined than usual, perhaps due to the company present, the insults still hew here yesterday as Robert Tisch and Richard Headlee faced off over the issue of their respec- tive tax proposals before the Detroit Economic Club. Prior to the rally, Tisch, the Shiawassee County drain com- missioner, had said he would try to be "businesslike" when addressing Headlee and the crowd. Headlee, president of an insurance company, yesterday claimed "I did not come here today to debate Bob Tisch." DESPITE THESE promises, and despite the fact the two men were an- swering prepared questions, spectators who came expecting their charac- teristic name-calling battle were not disappointed. TOWERING OVER his opponent, See TISCH,Page 7 Sadat invites Carter to Egypt CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said yesterday President Carter has accepted an in- vitation to come to Egypt for the signing of an Egyptian-Israeli peace treay resulting from the historic Camp David accords. Addressing his parliamedt on the summit accords, Sadat said they could not have been successful without Car- ter's "perseverence."" THE WHITE HOUSE said Carter wants to attend the signing, but press secretary Jody Powell said he did not know if it will be held in Egypt. Authorities said any Carter visit to Egypt depends on how quickly Egypt and Israel can forge a treaty to end 30 years of war in the Mideast. The talks: are to open at the ministerial level in Washington Oct. 12 with a projected settlement by Dec. 17. The United States will be a full participant, Powell said. "President Carter will go down in history as one o[the great leaders who changed the face of history from bitter- ness to love and from wars to peace," Sadat told parliament. "I TELL OUR people that our history and the history of civilization will place Carter among those who changed history," Sadat said to thunderous ap- plause. "I have no doubt that every Egyptian man and woman will await this visit to express to a great man their ad- miration and great apprecition," he said. Sadat's comments suggested Carter would receive a welcome surpassing that given former President Richard Nixon in 1974 when he was cheered by millions of Egyptians. Sadat had harsh words for Arab; leaders critical of the Camp David ac- cords and who call him a traitor for signing the agreement with Israel. He called Col. Moammar Khadafy of Libya "a crazy child." He invited King Hussein of Jordan to "assume his responsibiliites. I invite Syrian officials to take part in the talks so as to deal with the Israeli withdrawl from the Golan Heights," he said. He also called on leaders of the Palestine Liberation Organization to end their "farcical" differences. . "This is what Egypt was able to do at this stage.. . We do not claim to have reached a comprehensive settlement, but we have prepared the road toward a comprehensive settlement," Sadat. said. "If any Arab leadership can do bet- ter, we say to it 'yes' in all sincerity," Sadat continued. arter stan WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House made it clearer than ever yesterday that President Carter, despite congressional efforts to avert it, intends to veto legislation that would give income tax credits of up to $250 a year to offset college costs. A House-Senate conference commit- tee scaled back earlier versions of the bill in hopes of getting around Carter's previously announced plans to veto the measure as inflationary and misdirec- ted. BUT AT A White House briefing yesterday, Joseph Califano, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), said he will urge disapproval Ca! Ceric als pl By SHELLEY WOLSON After nearly a year and a half of organizing, a group of University clericals-the Organizing Committee for Clericals (OCC)-can now proceed with the formal organization of a new independent union. The OCC filed a petition last Friday to the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) for a cer- ids firm on tuition tax credit veto anyway. "The tuition tax credit that the House-Senate conference committee' approved last week is ineffective and inequitable in providing any really needed assistance to families of children in college," Califano said. "It is such a bad tax policy and such bad education policy that if it were enacted by the Congress I would recommend that the president veto the legislation." CALIFANO ARGUED that the tax credit bill would fuel inflation, increase government regulation of education and aid affluent families which do not need it. He urged Congress to approve in- stead an administration-backed measure which has been languishing in the House Rules Committee for several months and is generally thought to be dead. Both measures would cost roughly $1 billion a year, Califano said, but the administration bill would funnel the money in grants and reduced interest on loans to families earning up to $25,(0) a year. CALIFANO SAID that because the tax-credit measure would aid all students by the same amount, it would encourage schools immediately to raise their tuition by the amount of the credit, which would reach a maximum of $250 per student in 1980.f He also said it would increase federal regulation of educational institutions, forcing them to deal with the Internal Revenue Service on regulations gover- ning the credits. And he said it would give "significan- tly less assistance to the middle-income taxpayer" than the administration bill. "For example, a family of four ear- ning $20,000 a year, with one child in college, would receive $666 in a grant from HEW under its grant program. It would receive only, at a maximum, the $250 tax credit under the tuition tax credit legislation. "Moreover, under our program, that. family would be entitled to a larger amount of money in low-interest loans than is now the case." Carter had said he would veto earlier versions of the tuition tax credit bill, which also would have extended credits for the cost of private and parochial schools. House-Senate conferees limited the credits to college and post- secondary vocational tuition.'- But by denouncing the measure at the Council GOP will not appeal budget ruling an independent union that people will vote union," said Pat- tya Schwartzman, OCC recording secretary. After the petition was filed, MERC set up a conference hearing between one of their members, OCC represen- tatives, and also University represen- tatives and all their respective lawyers for Friday, Oct. 13. The hearing will define the bargaining unit-who will be represented by the union-and will also union negotiated instead of University supervisory discretion," said Marianne Jensen, OCC chairwoman. The opcc would like to eliminate the present system whereby wage increases are awarded based on merit evaluations. "Clericals are sdbject to yearly See UNIVERSITY, Page 2 Tuesday By JUDY RAKOWSKY. The seven member Republican caucus of the Ann Arbor City Council announced yesterday they will not ap- peal the September 17 court decision that found the caucus guilty of violating Michigan's Open Meetings Act. In a press conference before the regularly scheduled Monday night meeting, Council member James Cmejrek (R-Fourth Ward) read a prepared statement saying they would not seek further litigation mainly because of the extensive cost to the tax- original proposed budget. This was the first test of Attorney General Frank Kelley's interpretation of the Michigan Open Meetings act-an interpretation that includes political caucus meetings as public. THE COUNCIL Republicans, however, refuted the charge that their caucus met with a quprum present in May to discuss amendments to the budget. They said only five of the seven members were present through the majority of the meeting, but the sixth member arrived near the end. No vote was taken at that meeting,