LET'S GO BLUE See Editorial Page Y L it igati Paiti High - 70° Low - 360 See Today for. details Latest Deadline in the State Vol LXXXVI No. 129 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 15, 1977 Ten Cents Tw elve Pages Uf'tJUSEE NEWS APPENCA1LLDAALly Welcome back The time has come, the Walrus said, to think of many things; of shoes and strings and sealing wax and cabbages and .,, . spring? Well, that may not be exactly how the little ditty reads, but that's got to be what's on the minds of most students this post-spring-break-week, including those of us here at The Daily. Just like you, we didn't relish the thought of returning to the grind either, but vac- tion's over and it's time to resume the business of reporting. A lot happened while you were gone, but we kept track of it for you - a quick perusal of today's Daily and you'll be up to date. Mean- while, welcome back to Ann Arbor and welcome back to The Daily. We missed you. You oughta be in pictures There's a new researcher in town this week,'but he isn't a Nobel laureate from Harvard or a mathe- matician from MIT. His name is David Chan and his calling card reads Playboy Magazine. Chan, a photographer for that grandfather of contemporary girlie magazines, is in our fair city preparing for his next Playboy project: "The Girls of the. Big Ten." And -you guessed it - he's looking for* some local subjects. To prove he's legitimate, he produces a stack of newspaper articles chronicling his campus crusade for models, and then proudly boasts that he was in on. breaking the Liz Ray- Wayne Hays bedtime story. This week, he's setting up shop in the Campus Inn where he's accepting phone calls from University women who would like a session with Chan and his cameras, as well as visiting local haunts to search out subjects. How- ever, it's not quite clear why Chan and Playboy have chosen college campuses, because they sure aren't looking for brains. Happenings. .. are omnipresent today. At noon in the Pen- dleton Arts Information Center in the Union, Louis Stout Jr. plays his French horn as part of the Music at Mid-Day Series . . . also at noon the Ecumeni- cal Campus Center at, 921 Church hosts a lunch discussion on "Family Structure and Fertility" led by Prof. David Goldberg . . . MSA will hold a steering committee meeting at 1 in their Union of- fices . . . from 3:30-5:30 Hungarian violinist Denes Kovacs will present a master class in the Recital Hall of the School of Music. Free . . . Dr. David Ayalon of Princeton University lectures on "The First Years of the Ottoman Occupation of Egypt and Syria" at 4 in 200 Lane Hall . . . "I Am Some- body" will be on the big silver screen in MLB Lec- ture Rm. 1 at 4 p.m. and then again at 7:30 . . . Science Magazine editor Catherine Stimpson will speak on "The New Scholarship of Women" at 7:15 in the Rackham W. Conference Rm. . . . a Com- munity Arts Council informational meetingwill be held at 7:30 in the Pendleton Arts Information Cen- ter, second floor of the Union . . . also at 7:30 the Native American Solidarity Committee will hold an organizational meeting at the Lord of Light Lutheran Church at Hill and"S. Forest . . . for a third 7:30 activity, hear Soweto Student Represen- tative Council leader Khotso Seatlholo speak in the Schorling Aud. at the School of Education . . . and to round off the list of 7:30 happenings, attend the Games Club meeting for a discussion of regroup- ing and reassessment in Rm. 2338 of the School of Education . . . at 8, 76-year-old Jungian analyst, Dr. James Kirsch will speak on "Issues of a Re- ligious and Psychological Nature for the Current Generation" in the Green Lounge of East Quad ... Prof. Miriam Rosen-Ayalon. from the Hebrew Uni- versity in Jerusalem will discuss recent archaelogi- cal discoveries in Jerusalem at 8 in 203 Tappan Hall . . and with your last ounce of energy, drag yourself to the final event of the day, an 8 o'clock showing of the film "Sorry, No Vacancy," spon- sored by the World Hunger Task Force at the In- ternational Center. That's it. Excuses, excuses "My wife has halitosis and the doctor has pre- scribed milk of magnesia, about a quart a day. Also, she uses a bottle of ;nouthwash a day. If she didn't use it, you couldn't be in the same room with her, especially after she eats garlicky food. Can I use this as a write-off on-my taxes?" As April 1, - D-Day for money-makers country-wide- approaches. the taxpayer service at the Internal Revenue Service office in Detroit, has been getting some mighty odd questions and the one just cited is onlygthetbeginning. There's also thecase of the man who has a skin ailment and must, poor boy, bathe daily. "Can I deduct the cost of the water?" he asked. 'No' was Uncle Sam's reply to both re- quests. 0 On the inside ... President Carter has a new proposal aimed to- ward the decriminalization of marijuana. Details in the Page 3 Digest . : . the Commission for Wo- men discusses handling a household and a career simultaneously for today's Editorial Page . . . C.S. Nichols previews this week's Ann Arbor Film Fes- tival in a feature for the Arts Page . . . and there's a rehash of the spring break basketball happenings by Tom Cameron on the Sports Page. Onthe outside ... The strike: U; AFS.CME closer... By BOB ROSENBAUM fruitful, and the wage dispute sened considerably. had been les- Striking campus service workers begin their fourth week of picketing tomorrow with no con- tract settlement in sight, despite recent advances in negotiations with the University., Bargaining between the American Federa- tion of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME, Local 1583) and the University broke off last night, leaving the two sides with no fu- ture talks scheduled. THE CAMPUS, meanwhile, continues to offer most services in the absence of some 2,000 food service, hospital, maintenance and grounds work- ers. According to Chief University Negotiator Wil- liam Neff, exactly what the next' official move will be and who will make it are "open ques- tions." Over spring break, AFSCME officials an- but (not close enough nounced a change in their demands at the bar- gaining table. The union originally sought a $1.04 per hour wage increase over three years after the walkout began, but it changed its de- mands to a 70 cent per hour hike over two years. THE UNIVERSITY also altered its position, considering a 60 cent per hour increase over two years. But Neff clarified at another bargaining ses- sion last Friday that the University would not make its offer official unless AFSCME ratified the settlement beforehand. AFSCME bargaining leaders discovered in a membership meeting last Sunday that the union was cool toward the University's new wage posi- tion. At negotiations yesterday, AFSCME said it would not consider the 60 cent proposal. ON FEBRUARY 22, union members overwhelm- ingly rejected a 55 cent per hour wage hike over two years offered them in a tentative settlement. AFSCME went on strike the next day. Negotiators spent over six hours in bargain- ing yesterday, but came no closer to an agree- ment than they were on Friday.. The breakdown came as a bitter disappoint- ment to both parties. The two sides were look- ing forward to a possible settlement yesterday since talks over spring break were relatively STATE-APPOINTED MEDIATOR Thomas Ba- doud, present at contract talks since early Feb- ruary, said last night that there were "no plans at the minute" to schedule new talks between the University and AFSCME. Badoud added that he could not see any furth- er compromise on the wage issue at the present time. AFSCME Local President Joel Block last night called the University's bargaining procedures "ab- surd." He echoed previous claims that Univer- sity bargainers are "more intent on busting our union than on settling." ASIDE FROM WAGES, the Universtiy and AFSCME have begun discussions on another issue See 'U', Page 2 DID DEAD NURSING SUPERVISOR POISON PATIENTS? FBI By AP and UPI DETROIT - A federal attorney yesterday ordered FBI agents to interview a psychiatrist and others familiar with a hospital nursing supervisor who re- portedly confessed to poi- soning patients before she committed suicide. U.S. Attorney Philip Van Dam responded to reports that Betty Jakim, who died from a tranquilizer over- dose Feb. 3, left a note ad- mitting to the Ann Arbor Veterans A d m i n istration (VA) hospital poisonings. Jakim, 51, suffering from terminal cancer, was under psychiatric care before she killed herself in Florida. ACCORDING to a report pub- lished in the Detroit Free Press, Jakim made statements to a psychiatrist last August which amounted to a confession in the patient deaths. The report said she also made wconfessional statements to another psychia- trist and medical personnel while she was confined to an Ann Arbor mental hospital. The suicide note left by Jakim could destroy the case against two other nurses on trial for allegedly injecting Pavulon, a powerful muscle relaxant, into nine intensive care patients at the VA hospital. Two of the vic- tims died. The nurses, Filipina Narcisco, 30, and Leonora Perez, 32, both worked in the hospital's inten- sive care unit when a string of respiratory failures occurred in the summer of 1975. More than 50 patients suffered breath- ing difficulties between July 1 and August 15 of that year. Eleven died of unexplained causes. PEREZ AND NARCISCO are each charged with two counts of murder, seven counts of poi- soning and one count of con- spiracy. Defense (attorneys plan to to probe VA meet with U.S. District Judge Philip Pratt today to discuss the new developments and pos- sibly a dismissal motion. Jury selection began March 1 but the trial was in recess yester- day. The lawyers warned yester- day that Jakim's reported con- fession may complicate the se- lection process. DEFENSE ATTORNEY Thom- as O'Brien said the confession report might have wiped out the tentative choosing of jurors, who have not been shielded, from news accounts of the case. "This may further complicate the process," O'Brien said. "The judge may have to bring them all back in and ask them if they read the material and if it affected their ideas on the case." Prosecuting attorney Van Dam said FBI agents questioned Ja- kim during an 11-month inves- tigation of the mysterious breathing failures, but no gov- ernment official knew of the confession note. He said all pertinent records on Jakim were given to defense attorneys, as ordered by Pratt. "I DON'T KNOW 'what was held back. They have every- thing we have relative to Mrs. Jakim as far as I know. I've asked the FBI to go out and interview those people familiar with Mrs. Jakim. We'll just have to see where that leads." According to the Free Press report, Jakim was once con- sidered a suspect in the case because she had worked eve- nings, w';en most of the breath- ing failures occurred, and had access to most parts of the hos- pital. She was later dropped as a suspect because investigators said she was not at the hospital at certain times they 'believed the killer had to have been pre- sent. O'Brien said failure to share information about Jakim with the defense could lead to dis- missal of the charges. r'ratt almost threw out the government's case earlier this year when defense attorneys learned prosecutors had with- held some evidence. Open meetings law will have fe~w effects, city officials say By JULIE ROVNER Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Schumacher: Scale down technology By ENID GOLDMAN British economist E. F. Schumacher told a Future Worlds crowd of 1800 at Hill Auditorium Sunday that the world must scale down "this stupendous, breathtaking technological development which enables us to land people on the moon, but has not abolished degrading poverty." r Schumacher. who wound up a two-day visit to Ann Arbor with a series of workshops yesterday, espoused his theory of "inter- mediate technology," which he defined as "more productive than traditionalized methods in agriculture and industry, but less com- plex, res.ource-depleting and capital costly than western 'high' technology." THE AUTHOR of the book Small is Beautiful criticized the "al- most universal idolatry of giantism," and the drive for unlimited growth and profits, emphasizing the need for scaled-down tech- See SCHUMACHER, Page 2 The U.S. Weather Service hasn't forecast yet, but on March 31 the sun ally shine in Ann Arbor City Hall. issued its will offici- That's the day a new state "sunshine law" - formally titled the Open Meetings Act - takes effect. The law requires the meetings of many public bodies to be open to the pubhic and calls for advance notification of those meet- ings. BUT CITY OFFICIALS say the law is likely to cause few, if any, changes in local govern- ment policies, contending the sun has always shone on city meetings. The law will apply to the Ann Arbor City Council, the Ann Arbor Transportation Authori- ty, and the city's Planning, Housing, Historic District , and Building and Safety Commissions. "I can't see how the sunshine law will open any more doors than already are," said Council member Roger Bertoia (R-Third Ward). "We've been so open all along anyway, I just can't im- agine how it would affect the Council." UNDER THE NEW LAW, closed executive sessions will still be permitted for personnel matters, strategy sessions concerning labor ne- gotiations or real estate acquisition, and confi- dential communications with an attorney regard- ing litigation. The only executive sessions I can remem- ber," said Council member Robert Henry (R- See 'SUNSHINE,' Page 9 .1 COUNCIL DISCUSSES TREATMENT PLANT: ~ City sewage debated By LANI JORDAN During a special working ses- sion lastdnight, Ann Arbor City Council discussed plans for the city's new $27 million sewage treatment facility, which is scheduled for construction some time this summer. Public Works Director Joe Price presented Council with the plans for the waste treatment plant. It includes expansion of current incineration facilities which convert sludge, a sew- age waste product, into solid material. COUNCIL will vote on the is- sue next Monday. The incineration process con- sists of burning the sludge prod- uct an'd then disposing of the fi- nal waste material in a landfill area. -Co'incil members debated the out the sewage treatment cen- ter. He said a composting sys- tem, on the other hand, would use energy in the vehicles which are needed to remove the re- maining material. David Sprow, a representative from the State Department of Natural Resources (DNR), said if Council decides to substitute the incinerator with a compost- ing system, the entire sewage treatment plan would have to be taken back to the DNR for full approval of the facilities once again. "It would be going back.to See COUNCIL, Page 2 ascend to 4'lofty, heights By TOM MIRGA The rate at which lofts are being erected in University dormitory rooms has left ad- ministration officials lost in a cloud of sawdust. All across campus, the loft has become {~ ' the newest symbol of status and efficiency. Styles vary from dorm room to dorm room, rang- ing from stark, functional stru- tures to wooden mazes replicat- ing the utmost in total enter- tainment centers.: Regardless of cost or charac- ter, however, owners feel alike about their lofts: They wouldn't x live here without one. "THESE ROOMS without lofts look like caverns," Bursley resident Carl Szczechowski. "-They add a nice, rustic touch and make the rooms a lot warmer, especially the way mine is stained. Other rooms you walk into have nothing but doors that look so plastic and cold tile floors. They look so institutional " LSA delays vote on { nglish requirement By ELIZABETH SLOWIK A change in graduation requirements for English composition floundered yesterday when the LSA Governing Faculty delayed until the end of the month its vote on the matter. Thie recommendation for the change originated from a report of the English Composition Board (ECB), chaired by English Prof. ,l