TAX CUTS See EDITORIAL PAGE- Y t Datiti ICED x High-20 Low--2 See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 80 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 8, 977 Free Issue Eight Pages F.i - FMU SEE NEWS HACPENCALLDAYJLY Murder movie A Highland Park furniture dealer has announced plans to bring the gory saga of convicted sex- slayer John Norman Collins to the silver screen. The film, called "Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep" is being planned by a group headed by Ira Silver at an estimated cost of $1.5 million. Collins, now 28, is serving a life sentence at Southern Michi- gan Prison at Jackson for the 1968 strangling of Karen Sue Beineman. an 18-year-old EMU fresh- woman. She was the last of seven women to die during a two-year period in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Collins was not charged in the other six murders, and had one appeal of his conviction rejected by the state Sunreme Court. Gay experience An interdisciplinary survey of the lesbian and gay experience is being offered this term through Course Mart. The course, which will meet every Wednesday from 3-5 in Rm. 1053 of the Natural Science building, will explore such topics as gay history in the U.S. and Germany, coming out, sex roles,. oppression homophobia, and legal rights and remediei for gays. There are no prerequisites, and the instructors, both gay, say that straights, as well as gays, are welcome. If you're interested, call Dan Tsang, at 994-0473 or LSA Checkpoint (764-6810). Ask for the tape of Course Mart 373. Happenings..: .. are limited today to a meeting of the Ann Arbor Go Club, from 2 to 8 p.m. in Rm. 2050 Frieze Bldg. It's a dog's life A Welsh sheepfarmer was fined $34 yesterday for putting a metal ring through a dog's nose. It was the first prosecution of its kind ever brought by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA). The farmer also admitted filing the dog's teeth. The defendant, Allen Wil- liams, 45, told magistrates in the Welsh mountain twn of Llanfairr Caerreinion that he did it be- cause his black and white collie, Spot, had taken to biting shee. The ring was to prevent the dog from getting a good bite. Williams pleaded guilty to inserting the ring without anesthetic, causing unnecessary suffering to the dog. RSPCA offi- cials condemned the court's decision to return the three-year-old sheepdog tp the farm. "It's ab- solutely disgusting that he should be allowed to have the dog back after what he did to it," said RSPCA inspecor Len Jones. Peanut envy The postelection honeymoon is over for Ena Miller of Colville, Wash. She says her single puny peanut plant perished while she waited in vain for crop information from President-elect Carter, "It grew and grew all summer until it was six or eight inches tall," she said. "I was sure I would get at least one peanut after it bloomed." But when the crop failed to come in, Miller wrote to Carter. Instead of receiving pea- nut-growing information, she got an autographed photograph of Carter, a political brochure, a Christmas card, and an invitation to the Inaugura- tion. "Anyway, I voted for him," said Miller. "It must have been a Republican peanut." Eyebrows on parade Lassie, television's canine star, has more intel- igent eyebrows than Vice President-elect Walter Mondale, and Sen. Daniel Patrick. Moy'nihan (D- New York), according to beauty expert Mark Traynor. Lassie, he said, tops his list of the "Ten Most Memorable Eyebrows of 1976" because the dog's brows are "the most expressive and easily the most intelligent." Mondale's brows were rat- ed the "most honest and most romantic," and Moynihan's the "most mischievous, and least sen- atorial." Other winners include actor Sylvester ("Rocky") Stallone for the most "pathetic and doleful of eyebrows, and model Margaux Hem- ingway, for "bushy, almost mannish, yet the most imitated of brows." Clean ketaway At least one prisoner at the city jail in Fort Worth. Texas has cleaned up his act. He escaped the other day by picking up a broom and sweep- ing hs way out of the building. Police said the 25-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of auto theft and was about to be fingerprinted when he escaped. Lt. J. W. Cunningham said a jail at- tendant took the suspect to the identificaion bu- reau and left him. The man grabbed a broor, started tidying up the place and then made his clean getaway. On the inside ... Statehood for Puerto Rico? Someone forgot to ask the Puerto Ricans, says Steven Kursman in an Editorial Page piece . . . and Sports has the Surprise? 1V~ _ 1E WHEELER- No tine for "crap issues". By MIKE NORTON When candidates for Ann Arbor's mayoral and City Council posts filed their applications with the city clerk's office early this week there weren't many sur- prises in the pile. Mayor Albert Wheeler and Republican Mayor Pro Tern Louis Belcher (Fifth Ward) will be facing each other in the April 4 city election, but that had been an open secret for over a month. PETITIONS FROM 19 candidates were filed in the mayoral race and the five contests for City Council seats - several of them from members of the same party in certain wards. Thus, Democrats will hold a primary Feb. 21 in the First and Fifth Wards, while the Republicans will hold one in the Second. or i cj Petitions from the Socialist Human Rights Party (SHRP) and the Libertarian Party .have also been filed - though SHRP is only running a mayoral candidate and a First Ward City Council hopeful. The Lib- ertarians have registered candidates in the Second, Third, and Fifth Wards. Both Wheeler and Belcher plan to run issue-oriented campaigns, and concede that the mayoral race is shaping up as a tight contest. While Wheeler holds the advantage of a first-term incumbent, his position is offset by the fact that he was elected un- der a controversial preferential system which was repudiated last year by Ann Arbor voters. Had the preferential sys- tem not been in operation, Wheeler would have been defeated by Republican James Stephenson. BUT BELCHER, who was defeated in his bid for mayor six years ago, is wary f elections of relying too heavily on the city's Repub- lican leanings. Both candidates intend, they say, to avoid making personal attacks on each oth- .. " er in the coming campaign. "I want to run a very positive cam- paign," said Belcher. "It's not enough to.. say what the other candidate hasn't done; you have to be able to spell out what you intend to do." WHEELER AGREES, saying he wants "a campaign tuned toward issues and pro- grams. "There are enough differences between me and Lou (Belcher) in, terms of priori- < ties and proposals not to have to cam-t paign on crap issues," he added. -... Wheeler says he intends to stress the JELClER "I wa classic differences between Ann Arbor Dem- ocrats and Republicans. run (1 very positi See CITY, Page 5 campaign,... nt to ye Carter unveils 2-year plan to boost economy By AP and Reuter PLAINS, Ga.- President- elect Carter and leading congressional D e m o e rats agreed yesterday on a two- year, $30-billion program of job projects and tax cuts, including rebates of Brock Adams, t h e next Transportation Secretary, may over- turn the decision not to require air bags in $100 to $200 for many tax- payers. Carter's advisers and con- gressional leaders indicated checks could be in the mail by spring. Carter also spoke of "increased temporary Social Security benefits." BUT HIS ADVISERS said re- tired persons would share in the rebate program and that those who pay no income taxes would receive payments in lieu of a rebate. "I think it's a good approach to the resolition of a very seri- olisl stagant American econo- my" the President-elect said of the entire package. He met with reporters after a 4'/2-hour meet- ing with 12 top congressional Democrats. They predicted the program would get prompt and favorable action. The President-elect said the one-time rebate, totaling $7 bil- lion to $11 billion, would be a .ref'id '(v 1976 taxes intended nrimpr- to helo lower and mod- erate-inc-)me Americans. rA'"TT'S TOP economic ad- =-;,zr Charles Schultze, said a fmihl7 of fo'ir earning $10,000 alnnnlv would receive a re- bte of I100 to $200. Scht1tze al-") sail Carter also is con- siie H Ca nronoring an across-the- board rebate that Would benefit See CARTER, Page 5 Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER Totr r Of pOtver Shalom Michlin, a sophomore in the Engi ieering school, works on his "Tensegrita- tor" on the roof of Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity. The Tensegritator is an electrical generator utilizing wind power. Michlin built this test model during the summer and plans an electrical bicycle and an electric car for future summers. new cars. page 5. See story, CANCER THREAT IGNORED, PROFS CHARGE: State inaction, on PBB hit By DAVID GOODMAN Three people active in the fight against PBB food con- tamination charge that greed, politics and bureaucratic bung- ling have repeatedly blocked vital state action on the chemi- cal. They also blame government inaction for delaying over two- and-one-half years a major study on the effects of PBB on humans. They say this may have resulted in permanent health damage to thousands of Michigan residents. THE HIGHLY TOXIC PBB was accidentally mixed with animal feed used. around the state in 1973, leading to the ill- ness and death of thousands of poultry and cattle. Subsequent- ly, farmers and others who came in contact with the con- taminated animals began re- porting serious medical diffi- culties, and these were con- firmed by a study released Tuesday. "For years, farmers have complained that they have been having health problems - seri- ous ones - and they've been ignored, maligned," according to Edie Clark, staff aide to Michigan House Speaker Bobby Crim, who has worked on the PBB issue for two years. Dr. Thomas Corbett, Univer- sity professor of anesthesiology, has also had a long-standing concern over the possible ef- fects of PBB and likewise has met many Frustrations in try- ing to do something about the danger he saw. IN THE SUMMER of 1974, Corbett conducted studies which pointed to PBB as a cause of birth defects in laboratory mice. Noting the chemical similarity between PBB and PCB - a chemical known to be cancer causing -- he felt there was reason to believe that PBB might be a cancer danger as well. "I expressed my concerns back in 1974 to all the regula- tory agencies. They didn't pay any attention to it at all," he said. Next, Cooper contacted Dr. Irving Selikoff, a noted environ- mental health researcher at New York City's Mt. Sinai Hos- pital. Selikoff said he was in- strested in studying the PBB contamination in Michigan, but needed an official invitation to begin work. DESEPITE COOPER'S, re- peated requests, both the Agri- culture Department and the Governor's office refused to give Selikoff the necessary go-ahead, and study plans lay dormant for two-and-a-half years. Last year, a chance conversa- tion between Cooper and Clark produced a public invitation by House Speaker Crim for Selik- off to study PBB effects in Mich- igan. His preliminary findings, released this week, showed high rates of nervous, skin, joint, and gastro - intestinal disorders among PBB exposure victims. "It's a great chance to strike while the iron is hot," Clark said, expressing hope that tighter PBB controls might now be enacted because of publici- ty from Selikoff's report. STILL, SHE SAYS that gov- ernment failure to respond to the PBB threat earlier "just See STATE, Page 5 FBI holds Soviet for space info leak By AP and Reuter NEWARK, N.J. - A Russian emigrant was arrested late last night and charged with passing secret information about the American space shuttle program to a Soviet agent posing as a U.N. diplomat. Ivan Roga sky, a former Soviet seaman who came to the United States in 1971, was arrested in Lakewood, not far from where he was living in rural southern New Jersey, according to Louis Giovanetti, special agent in charge of the FBI in New Jersey. THE FBI in Washington said Rogalsky had in his possession at the time of his arrest some "highly classified" documents from the RCA Corp. space center at Princeton. The FBI added the document concerned a sensitive defense department project under study at the RCA Center. Rogalsky is accused of spying and conspiring to pass classi- fied data to Yevgeni Petrovich Karpov, second secretary of the Soviet delegation to the United Na ions. Karpov has diplomatic immunity and cannot be arrested by U.S. authorities. HE WAS named as a co-conspirator with Rogalsky by FBI See RUSSIAN, Page 5 Ford hands energy outline to Congress From Wire service Reports WASHINGTON (AP)-President Ford sent Congress a bar- rage of energy proposals yesterday but failed to include in the list his politically touchy proposal to lift price controls from gasoline. Ford's recommendations amounted to a summary of his earlier energy proposals, ranging from decontrol of prices on newly-discovered natural gas to easing federal clean air re- quirements. FORD ALSO SAID HE WILL announce next week his own ideas for reorganizing the federal. energy bureaucracy-a move that could ses alCmP te i mP n vht r-nm P a n~ltT Prof. Ford? U' opti-mistic By EILEEN DALEY With his term as President drawing to a close, University and political insiders have spec- ulated that Gerald Ford is lke- ly to accept a visiting profes- sorship of Political Science at his alma mater. The President was offered that position by the University last month and is expected to an- nounce his decision Jan. 20, the day he leaves office. and University President Rob- ben Fleming have already dis- cussed how the President would participate in various political science classes. The two men spoke while Ford visited Ann Arbor Dec. 19 to attend com- mencement ceremonies wi'n his wife, Betty. REGENT DAVID Laro (R- Flint) remarked that it is "very likely" Ford will accent the University's offer. ............... .... . ..... ....... . QMu