BO'TTLE BILL See Editorial Page .E. LIE iguu u ti MARGINAL High 53 Low -340 Vo. LXXXVIII, No. 29 Ann Arbr, Michigan2-Tuesday, October 11, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages ntebllum oldies ma bump to " * By BRIAN BLANCHARD In the first copyright statute change But, he said, the composers and h" fPsince the Roriginal law of 9ans9 - __ -- orty ..:..., - .r .: i If worse comes to worst, says Marching Band Director George Cavender "we can play Tchaikovsky with a rock beat or disco.' IMusic Dean Allen Britton is thank- ful for the basics: "Beethoven is free, Mozart is free." 'THE REASON for this sudden shift to classics is that antebellum music - for the most part - public domain, and therefore qncopyright- ed. After Jan. 1, music composers and publishers will crack down on pre- yiously royalty-free performances on campuses around the country. Cav- ender and Britton, along with all other musicians. fi'em cellists to folk singers, will be forced to reconsider' using current hits in their repertoire. Although universities have never been exempt from copyright laws in music, John Kettlehut of the Univer- s.ity's General Counsel's office said, "A lot of people have assumed that universities don't have to comply." congress voted last year not to exempt universities from the law. ON THE FIRST of the year - and' more importantly for Director Cav- ender, before the Rose Bowl Parade - universities will begin to pay for the use of music written after the Civil War. In Washington, the American Council on Education and a supbort- ing group, the Professional Theatri- ,;cal Programs, are negotiating with two groups representing composers and publishers to work out a rate and. system for payment. Because so much cultural life is now on the campuses, composers are trying to tap a rich source, said Britton. "I imagine they'll want to sign a large increase in fee," he said. BRITTON explained that the American Council on Education would argue for low or no rates since universities hold concerts for the students and faculty, not for profit. publishers might argue that "the university has to pay for electricfty even though it's non-profit." Attorney Kettlehut said he doesn't 'see any quick easy solution" to the problem. "In fact," he predicted, '"I expect to see some litigation" be- tween the two sides before it is resolved Kettlehut said the fee may be "something like 20 cents per head" for each performance. Anoth- er possibility is a flat fee from the University for all performances each year. University Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff doesn't have "the foggiest (idea) at this stage of the game" how the University will pay for the use of music and manuscripts, but said free performances will probably be exempt from any charges. But Cavender is anxious to find out. "We've got to know right now," he said. He's right. You can't get away with Brahms in Pasadena. r ' -= .. 0* *0 'f0 f " 4 0. s "0 r1 " s " 1 " " S wwrrw * '4 a r~aa aS" l ! .. ...... 0 S 6 Election dispute screeches to a Nobel Peace Prize winners Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan (left) chat with Britain's Queen Elizab reception earlier this year. The two women were awa ded the 1976 prize for organizing peaceful interfaithi in troubled North Ireland, despite extremist threats. f Iialt;t By JULIE ROVNER The Michigan Court of Appeals in Lansing yesterday granted a stay of proceedings which will temporarily halt the trial over last April's disputed Ann Arbor mayoral election. Attorneys for Mayor Albert Wheeler and Councilman Louis Belcher predic- ted it will be at least a week before the court makes a decision whether or not to hear an appeal concerning the legality of asking someone to reveal his -AP Photo or her vote. 'eth at a marches BELCHER IS SUING Wheeler on the grounds that the mayor is holding his post illegally because of voting irregu- larities which occurred in the election. Faulty maps were used during the regi- stration process and a number of town- ship residents were accidentally regi- stered to vote in the April contest, which Wheeler won by one vote. The stay was granted after Wheeler's attorney, Robert Grace, filed an appli- Scation asking for immediate considera- tion of the matter. Even as Grace was presenting his re- tional for 16 quest, attorneys for two of the 20 town- reedom for ship voters who have been subpeonaed " and abol- to tell how they voted were also in Lan- th penalty. sing filing a motion to quash the sub- etary, Mar- peonas and to reverse a contempt order ndon news against one woman who refused to re-* c.t veal her vote. emporaril the continuation of the proceedings revealing their vote or going to could violate someone's rights. said Jonathon Rose, VanHattum' "If this line of questioning is ruled torney. improper;" said Grace, "then there's Rose, along with the two ACLU no way to get the genie back into the yers representing., Lazinsky, cl bottle."Kelley's order is unconstitutiona LAST TUESDAY, Monroe County. Circuit Court Judge James Kelley ruled that the 20 voters would have to reveal whom they voted for. When two University women - junior Susan VanHattum and grad student Diane Lazinsky - refused to tell, Kelley threatened them with contempt charges and possibly jail. VanHattum was actually taken into custody, charged, and handcuffed. She was released after a few hours. "We want them to rule that a voter can never be made to choose between cause it violates the rights of his client by denying her the secrecy of her vote. GRACE, WHILE ASKING for essen- tially the same thing, also asserts that Belcher's lawyers are using unfair trial tactics. "At the beginning, they said they were going to prove only that a number of people voted illegally. When the judge refused to grant a summary judgment, they changed their tactics. The way in which these people voted presents a whole new strategy that we See ELECTION, Page 12 y jail," 's at- [aims al be- 76, '77 PRIZES A WARDED: Amnest Int'1 Irish ytt OSH pacifists Win peace OSLO, Norway (AP) - Two wo- movement to end eight years of pri men antiwar activists in Northern fighting in their homeland between yea Ireland and Amnesty International, Protestant and Catholic extremists. "pr t l the London-based organization that works on behalf of political prison- ers, won Nobel peace prizes yester- day. The Nobel committee of the Nor- wegian parliament awarded the 1976 prize to Betty Williams, 33, and Mairead Corrigan, 32, for organizing a j broad-based "Peace People's" THE WOMEN launched the cam- paign more than six months after the Feb. 1 deadline for peace prize nom- inations last year, when . all 50 candidates were rejected and no award was given. Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov won it in 1975. The committee awarded the 1977 ish A tin con "lin me prizt ze to Amnesty Internal ars of efforts to win f isoners of conscience torture and the dea mnesty's general secr Ennals, told a Lo ference the prize recc nk between peace and ntal human rights tha See ANTIWAR, P olice investigating breathing failure.at ognizeuu le the funda- at Amnesty 'age 9 APPEALS USUALLY occur after a decision has been reached, but excep- tions are made if the court deems that Sky-scop ing:t HBMeavens lower on AngellHall1 By MARTY LEVINE Oakwood By KEITH RICHBURG Dearborn Police are interviewing employes of the Oakland Hospital, and have issued a composite sketch of an unidentified man who reportedly gave one Oakland patient an injection last week, causing the patient to stop breathing. The police entered the case after a laboratory report from the Michigan Cancer Foundation found an "uniden- tifiable foreign or organic substance" in the patient's blood. Michigan State Police, however, reported they found no foreign substances when testing the blood sample. THE PATIENT, whose name is being withheld, reported a week ago Saturday that a man dressed in hospital green en- tered his room, gave him an injection and fled. Moments later the patient suf- fered a breathing failure. The patient's roommate corroborated the story, however; the two gave totally different descriptions of the mysterious "man in green." "I know that there are two composite sketches," said hospital spokeswoman May Ann Meysenberg. "One from the patient's description and one from his roommate's description. And the two are totally dissimilar." DEARBORN POLICE Sergeant James Hughes, head of the Oakwood invesitgation, confirmed that the two hospital hospital. Over 50 patients stopped breathing during July and August of that year, but the breathing failures ended abruptly on August 15, 1975, when the FBI entered the hospital. Two VA nurse, Filipina Narciso and Leonora Perez, were tried and convic- ted of poisoning five patients at the Ann Arbor VA hospital in 1975. The women, both Philippine citizens, are currently serving an interim sentence of "obser- vation and testing" at the Womens Penitentiary in Alderson, West Virginia. Meanwhile, lawyers for Narciso and Perez are planning the lengthy appeals process. Federal Judge Philip Pratt, who presided over the case, has scheduled Wednesday, November 11 to hear arguments over defense motions for a mistrial, a new trial and/or a directed verdict of aquittal. IN BOTH the VA case and the Oak- wood -incident, patients suffered breathing failures after receiving injec- tions. The VA patients ,were found to have Pavulon, a powerful muscle- relaxant used during surgery, in their blood and liver bile. There is no report yet whether Pavulon is the "foreign' substance" that caused the Oakwood breathing failure. In both instances, a man in a hospital green scrub suit was seen at the scene It is evening. The sky is spread thick with stars. Perched on the roof of Angell Hall, six students are gathered around a still figure hunched over a telescope. All is quiet as they wait expectantly for his next move. This group' is taking part in a "star-hopping" astronomy lab, anxiously awaiting its first sighting. Tonight, perhaps, they'll be able to see the four-star system of Mizar and Alcor in the Big Dipper - or the Andromeda Galaxy, two million light years away. IN CASE YOU HAVEN'T NOTICED, there are two domes atop j Ross= I