SIRICA SPEAKS See Editorial Page (Z1 iadfr iAa &UlliF SLOPPY High-39 Low-31 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 76 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, December 6, 1974 Ten Cents Ten Pages j tJtu;E tI.S HAPPE CL 6-ONLy Water torture The Detroit Water Board has developed a new twist for reading their customers' water meters. When the board has trouble getting into a home to read the meter, they merely send the customer a bill for $78.10. The board used to send out a stan- dard letter requesting to read the meter. But they found the letters were unanswered and the meters unread. The $78 bill, however, sends cus- tomers dashing to the telephone to patch things up with the water board. "This way really scares the daylights out of people and they call right away," said a service representative. An inflated bill is sent only if the department is unable to read a meter for several months. If there is still no response, a bill for $160 is sent out three months later, and the amount doubles every three months until the customer sets up an appointment. Dope note Codeine and other pain-killing prescription drugs may have to be rationed next year because of critical shortages of legitimate opium, an opium importer's representative told Congress yesterday. The pharmaceutical industry will be able to meet only about 80 percent of next year's projected demand for opium derivative drugs such as co- deine, according to testimony presented before a Senate hearing. Except for wartime emergencies it could be the first rationing in the United States of a drug in short supply. 299 and 143*... . . . are this week's winning lottery numbers. Second chance numbers are 984 and 345. Winning numbers in the jackpot drawing are 634177, 82671 and 910. Happenings... ... there isn't a whole lot going on today. Have lunch at the Guild House's noon luncheon and listen to Dr. Theodore Kachel talk about "Intro- ducing ethical activity in American Higher Educa- tion: A Model for Change." Guild House is at 802 Monroe . . . The Michigan ski team is holding a ski swap today and tomorrow. Bring your equip- ment to the coliseum at Hill and 5th today between 2 and 9 p.m. All merchandise will be on sale tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. . . . The office of Ethics and Religion is sponsoring a visit of the Mata Atnananda, a guru from Thunder Bay, Canada in the West lounge of South Quad . . . at 8:30 p.m. in the Ed School's Schorling Aud. there will be a presentation of Master Dance Theses, with choreography by Sarah Martens and Jane Schwartz. Admission is a $1.50 . . . and there will be a meeting today at 5 p.m. to plan for the National March and Rally against Racism Dec. 14. The meeting is in East Quad, Rm 129. Tapes go public The White House tapes played at the Watergate cover-up trial probably will be released for public broadcast after the trial ends, a federal judge in- dicated yesterday. "The public should have the opportunity to hear them," U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell said in a memorandum. He ruled that former President Richard Nixon, who has protested public release of the tapes, "has no right to prevent normal access to these public docu- ments . .. His words cannot be retrieved; they are public property and his opposition is accordingly rejected," Gesell said. Grief stew The Kroger supermarket chain has begun re- calling its house brand of beef stew after one Georgia woman died and another was hospitalized after eating a can of stew contaminated by deadly botulism bacteria. Agriculture department officials said the canned beef stew was distributed by Kroger, headquartered in Cincinnati and processed by Key Packing Co., in Tennessee. The contami- nated stew came from a lot of 24,000 cans processed last July 11. Both Key and Krogers have initiated voluntary recalls of the product. The stew is in 24 ounce cans which can be identified by a code "'EST. 712 192 S4" embossed in the lids. Cans should be returned to the store. "Under no circum- stances should the cans be opened and tasted," officials said. Symptoms of botulism poisoning usually begin within 12 to 36 hours after con- taminated food is eaten and include double vision, inability to swallow, speech difficulty and a pro- gressive choking. 4 On the inside... . . Paul O'Donnell's collection of political com- ments from the European Press appears on today's Editorial Page . . . Ed Lange previews this week- end's swim meets on the Sports page . . . and it's Cinema Weekend on the Arts page. On the outside... Would you believe rain? A storm developing in the Gulf Coast will cause more cloudiness during the afternoon with a chance of rain by evening. U. Center chief By GORDON ATCHESON and CHERYL PILATE Dr. Arnold Kambly, the owner and operator of a local, private-psychiatric facility for emotion- ally disturbed boys, was arrested and arraigned yesterday for allegedly taking over $16,000 in federal funds under false pretenses. The director of the controversial University Center was taken into custody after the state Attorney General's office filed a complaint charg- ing Kambly with 16 counts of submitting bills for services never rendered. F O L L O W I N G arraignment in 15th District Court, Kambly was released' on $10,000 bond. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for December 11 to determine if he should be bound over for trial. The maximum penalty for obtaining federal ing funds under false pretenses is five years in pri-" son and a $2,000 fine. tha Kambly's center, which has no connection with psy the University, has been the target of numerous CH probes in the past year, including an investiga- fal tion by the U. S. Senate Permanent Investiga- era tions Subcommittee.' BECAUSE most of the 25 patients housed at CH the facility are dependents of military personnel, an their treatment was formerly subsidized by the mi Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uni- (J formed Service (CHAMPUS), a division of the A Pentagon. file Kambly, the center's only staff psychiatrist, wo billed CHAMPUS for therapy given to patients H while they were not living at the facility, accord- trrested to the complaint. "Many of the allegations by Arnold Kambly at he had on certain dates rendered intensive ychiatric treatment and therapy to named :AMPUS beneficiaries were totally untrue and se," states the charge filed by Attorney Gen- +;> al Frank Kelley. FOLLOWING the Senate Investigation last July, AMPUS cut off funding to the facility pending inspection and accreditation by the Joint Com- > ttee on the Accreditation of Hospitals CAH). At that time, Kambly announced that he had ed for the JCAH inspection which he said uld take place in late September. lowever, when contacted yesterday, a JCAH See DR. KAMBLY, Page 2 !)irica sa ys Dr. Arnold Kambly trial will end without AP Photo Listen, Henry . * * Secretary of State Henry Kissinger chats with Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin on the South Lawn of the White House yesterday. They were awaiting the arrival of West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. PRESS CONFERENCE: Flem--ing hits Cinese WASH INfGTON (R -- The Watergate cover-up trial will end without the testimony of former Presi- dent Richard Nixon, U. S. District Judge John Sirica ruled yesterday. Declaring that Nixon's testimony is n o t "indis- pensable or necessary," Sirica said much of what Nixon knows has been or can be obtained from other witnesses, including the five defendants. BEYOND THAT, the judge said, Nixon's testimony is not required because the former president's credibility as a wit- ness is in doubt. Noting that Nixon is among 26 unindicted co - conspirators in the case, Sirica said the for- mer president "has been ac- cused, in effect, of being an ac- complice of the defendants." "Certainly . .. his testimony would be subject to the instruc- tion to the jury that it should be received with caution and scrutinized with care," Sirica said. THE 61 - YEAR - OLD Nixon, recovering at his San Clemente, Calif., estate from complica- tions of a chronic phlebitis con- dition, was subpoenaed last September by trial defendant and former White House aide John Ehrlichman. Ehrlichman opened his case yesterday, and among the first witnesses called by his lawyer was former White House special counsel Charles Colson. C o 1 s o n, also an unin- dicted co-conspirator in-the cov- er-up case, is currently serving a prison term for a related Watergate offense. INITIALLY, in his six page order, Sirica granted a request from Nixon's lawyer, Herbert Miller, that subpoenas for his client's testimony be dismissed. The order also ruled out the possibility that Nixon might answer written questions Court-appointed d o c t o r s said the former President might be able to testify twice daily under oath at his Califor- nia estate with a doctor pres- ent. SIRICA SAID the limitations within the medical opinion alone should answer attempts by de- fendants to get Nixon's testi- mony. "The witness is simply un- available to be deposed," Sirica said. testimony AP Photo ROBERT STRAUSS, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, listens intently as the party's charter commission, meeting in Kansas City, debates a key compromise plan for delegate quotas. Dems compromise on quota proposal on edu By DAVID WHITING University President Robben Fleming yesterday took a blast at the educational system in China for what he described as over-politicized learning. At a press conference four days after his return from a three-week China tour, Fleming said he had observed that pros- pective students "cannot get an education unless they subscribe icational system to their (the government's) po- litical philosophy." BUT THE president clearly got a favorable overall impres- sion of the People's Republic. He said:t"Anybody'has to ad- mire what they have done." He pointed to "the high rate of illiteracy which existed until after liberation," referring to the Communist takeover in 1949. Describing his meeting with Galens Society aesholds fund drive By JIM TOBIN As you trudge through the snow today and tomorrow, some folks in red ponchos may try to panhandle you. Have no fear-their cause is a good one. These people are amongthen50 members of the Galens Honorary Medical Society, an organization of juniors and seniors in the Medical school devoted to supporting children's charities. TODAY FROM 7 a.m. until midnight and tomorrow from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. have been set aside for the group's major fund-raising drive of the year-the 47th Annual Galens Tag Days. Contributions to the drive go largely to the children's workshop at Mott Children's Hospital on the medical campus. The workshop provides academic classes for older children who are missing school, as well as a program of games and Chinese vice premier Teng Hsiao-ping, Fleming said the high official told him it would be difficult to normalize U.S.- Chinese relations before the cru- cial question of Taiwan - and its support from Washington - is settled. Stating that the primary pur- pose of his trip was to visit uni- versities, Fleming spoke of tour- ing six schools during his three week tour of China. FLEMING explained that Chinese students are selected on the basis of their political at- titude towards the present gov- ernment and its policies, their physical condition, and their ac- ademic aptitude. Fleming said he was dismay- ed to find that Chinese stu- dents are given few academic options. They "are told to study in X' areas . . . with the pri- mary function of serving the people . . . at the end of three years they are assigned a job," he said. Viewing "the heavy political emphasis" in China as a prob- lem Fleming pointed out that "professors who espouse other philosophies (than the govern- ment's) no longer work on the faculty." ACCORDING to Fleming, no grad'iate schools exist in China and the three-year undergrad- By AP and Reuter KANSAS CITY, Mo. - A coa- lition of Democratic regulars and reformers won approval yesterday ofta crucial compro- mise on quotas that calls for affirmative action to encourage full participation of minority groups, women and young peo- ple. However, the article, approv- ed by a lopsided 42-6 vote, ruled out any suggestion of manda- tory quotas for these groups in state delegations - a move aimed at avoiding an inter-party feud on the issue. THE DEMOCRATIC Rules Committee made the decision after two days of discussion on the party's first-draft charter of the 1980 party rules, which will be presented to a mini- convention of more than 2,000 members here tomorrow. Party leaders, meanwhile, prepared a resolution that na- tional Democratic Chairman Robert Strauss said will be relevant "to the economic concerns of the people of this country." Sources said the resolution would call for equitable wage- price controls unless the econ- omy picks up soon, and would recommend an array of other measures to fight both infla- tion and recession. IT WILL be debated after the See DEMS, Page 7 I Slocal Overload strai emergency room care By JO MARCOTTY Second of three parts The two local emergency rooms at St. Joseph Mercy and University Hospital are meant to handle only emergencies. But to thousands of "Seventy-five per cent of the times an emer- gency room is the only entrance to the hospital and the health care system," said Dr. Sidney Smock, director of the University Hospital emer- gency room. "Emergency patients have doubled .,. ...n - - ~,. I. ....no n.xn r rr na anla l rnn t fW