i o \ COUNCIL UNCHANGED See Editorial'Page Y it iau :43 a t I RERUN High-30* Low-1S* Latest Deadline in the State See Today for details Vol. LXXXViI, No. 148 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, April 6, 1977 Ten Cents Ei IIg ght Pages rn5E E*4 ~M k zDi Single-vote win may hold firm The old switcheroo As part of a regular rotation, English professor John Knott will replace Jean Carduner as asso- ciate dean of qurricular affairs this fall. Knott has been the undergraduate chairman of the English department for the last three years and has been at the University for ten years. Knott says he will concentrate on "Improving the quality of under- graduate education" and indicated he will encour- age innovative curriculum. Carduner, in his third year as dean, will return to the Romance Lan- guage Department Happenings ... ...Start off today with a blood-stirring demon- stration on the Diag at noon in support of the 38 AFSCME workers ,suspended or fired as a result of strike activities . .. from 12-1, the International Center, 603 E. Madison, will sponsor a seminar entitled "Culture Strain" . . . "National Welfare Reform and its Impact on Michigan Programs" is the topic of a colloquium to be presented by Dr. John Dempsey in Rackham Amphitheater from 2-4 . . . at 3 in MLB lecture rm. 1, John Alcock will talk about "Sex and the Single Bee", buzz, buzz, eh? . . . then at 4, "The Disciplines of' His- torical Geography: Bringing Biblical Studies Down . to Earth" is the subject of a lecture by Anson Rainey of Harvard University in rm. B115 in MLB . . . also at 4, there will be a meeting for all students interested in majoring in Judaic stu- dies in rm. 3050, Frieze Building . . . slurp down some dinner and then go hear Prof. Abraham Yassover speak on "Israelis, and Palestinians" at 7 at Hillel, 1429 Hill .. . also at 7, everybody is welcome to a practice of the Ann Arbor Morris Dancers in the Cook room in MARC housing in the Law Quad . . . there will be a film on the liberation movement in Mozambique at 7:30 at the People's Produce Co-op, 206 N. Fourth ave . . . also at 7:30, the Washtenaw County unit of the American Diabetes Association will show a new film on diabetes in Community room B in Briar- wood Mall . . . then at 8, George Smith will speak in 311 W. Engineering on "Tug-Barge Combination Operations on the Great Lakes" . . . finally, at 8, there will be a seminar on "How to Deal with Crisis and Stress" at the Wesley Foundation on the corner of State and Huron. Enjoy this day of your existence. $pirit of $eventy $ix After endless red, white and blue salt shakers, "Let's Go America" paper plates, Greatest Ameri- can in History .polls, dramatizations of the Battle of Trenton, an. professorial monologues on "Un- discovered Maps of the Revolution", the Univer- sity of Rhode Island has finally decided to pack in the Bicentennial. Honest, folks, they really tried to spend every last cent of the money al- lotted by the school's development office to fund the nation's 200th birthday celebration. But in the end, the school's Bicentennial Commission found it still had $1.30 left, so they've invested the money at five per cent interest to be used towards the Tricentennial in the year 2077. By that time, the commission figures, the investment will be worth $162.81. And for all you mathematics majors,,at an annual inflation rate of seven per cent the Tri- centennial sum will, actually only be worth about 19.7 cents in Bicentennial wampum. Rest in peace If your most distressing yard problem is cop- ing with stray garbage, consider the problem of Robert Krall, who awoke one morning to find 3 dead moose in the front yard of an out-of-town neighbor in Eagle River, Alaska. The 900 pound beast apparently was struck by a car, staggered onto the lawn and exuired. Krall, being a good neighbor and not overly fond of the aroma of rotting moose decided to try and dispose of the carcass. The Alaska Fish and Game Denartment said it couldn't do anything because the moose had died on private pronerty. Municinal health of- ficials said they couldn't do anything but that Krall had better move the dead moose before it became a health hazard. The town dum refused the gift because it doesn't accept dead animals. And a friend who owns sled does couldn't even take the meat because the law forbids feeding big game animals tc dogs. But rather than dig n his neiahhnr's narkway and give the moose a decent burial right on the spot, Krall finally hired a wreekpr a-d a truck to hajl it to Anchorage's Merrill Field. On the inside . . Read about the fighting in Lebanon in the Daily Dieest on Page 3 . . on the Editorial Page, Joan Reisman writes about problems facing women .. . David Keeps has the scoop on a new rock group called Blondie on the Arts Page . . . and on the Snorts Page, Geoff Larcom offers some thoughts on the pennant race in the National League's West division. Ot the outside . .. By JULIE ROVNER and LANI JORDAN The Ann Arbor Board of Canvassers, after o v e r 10 hours of reviewing the tally' sheets from Monday's elec- tion, found nothing to indi- cate that M a y o r Albert Wheeler had not gained a second term by the slim- mest possible margin - a single vote. The board instructed City Clerk Jerome Weiss to draw "'ip certification p a p e r s which, when s i g n e d, will m a k e the results official. Barring unforseen develop- ments, t h e board members will sign the papers today, and the h o t t e S t mayoral race in the city's history will be over. The result found by the board matched Weiss' totals from Mon- day night: 10,660 for Wheeler, 10,559 for Republican Louis Bel- cher. Socialist Human Rights Party (SHRP) candidate Diana Slaugh- ter received 356 votes. THE CANVASSERS convened at 2 p.m. yesterday in the City Council chambers to begin their scrutiny of the election results, and finished shortly after mid- night. An attorney for Belcher was present, and was already ask- ing questions in preparation to petition fora recount, a Council source said. "I guess that's the next step," Belcher said last night. THE FOUR canvassers, two Democrats and two Republicans, are political appointees nomi- nated by their respective party caucuses, and then approved by City Council. "Basically, t h e canvassers take all of the reports from the various precincts, as well as the absentee ballots, and just add them up," Wheeler said, Current members of the Board of Canvassers are Democrats Theodore Beals and Carol Rees, and Republicans Rae Weaver and Don Kenney. IF THREE of the four agree to sign the certification reports this afternoon, then the election becomes official. If no agreement is reached, the, task falls to the Washtenaw County Board of Canvassers. If no settlement is reached there, See MAYOR'S, Page 8 Wheeler VA jury hears Pavulon facts By LAURIE YOUNG Special to The Daily DETROIT - Prosecutors in the Veterans' Administration (VA) Hospital murder trial yesterday brought to the stand an expert witness who gave detailed background on the powerful muscle-relaxing drug Pavulon -the drug alleged to have been used to poison nine hospital patients in 1975. Dr. Marcelle Willock, an anesthesiologist from New York's Roosevelt Hospital, re- sponded to two hours of redundant, complex questioning by government and defense at- torneys. THE QUESTIONS centered on Pavulon's medical characteristics, how it is adminis- tered, how the signs of its use appear in patients, and how it might cause death. Willock confirmed that the time the drug takes to affect a patient and possibly cause a breathing failure varies widely and de- pends on many complicated factors. The onset of a Pavulon-caused breathing failure, when the drug is injected -into in- travenous (IV) tubes, depends on the rate of flow of the IV solution into the patient's veins, on the amount of drug administered, and on the dilution of the drug in the IV solution. The patient's condition and the presence of other drugs are also factors. WILLOCK SAID that patients will not show any symptoms of a breathing failure until they have received at least one to two milligrams of Pavulon, regardless of how quickly or slowly the drug is injected. She explained that Pavulon is used as a muscle-relaxant -when a patient is given aid by a mechanical respirator. Also, Pavulon is sometimes used during operations in or- der to relax certain muscles and thus make easief the surgeon's job. In most of these cases, however, the patient would be asleep and would not show symptoms, Willock said. WILLOCK IS ONE of the prosecution's expert witnesses in the trial of two nurses, Filipina Narciso and Leonora Perez, who are accused of poisoning nine patients, two fatally, at Ann Arbor's Veterans' Adminis- tration hospital during the summer of 1975. The government charges that the nurses injected Pavulon into the patients' intra- venous tubes, which drip either food or med- ication from solution-filled bags into pa- tients' veins. Willock explained the sequence of the symptoms: first, the patient's vision be- See VA, Page 2 They say e'very vote counts; they're ri By LANI JORDAN and JULIE ROVNER It is said that in a plose election even one vote can make the difference, and Monday night, there were a lot of people crowing that it was their vote that gave Mayor Albert Wheeler his one-vote victory over Republican challenger Louis Belcher. Who pulled the deciding lever giving Wheeler 10,660 votes to Belcher's 10,659? WAS IT SHARON Wilke? Wilke, an engineering student, almost didn't vote at all. After a sermon from her roommate on the demo- cratic process, Wilke arrived at Stockwell Hall shortly before the polling site dlosed, only to discover that her voter's registration had not yet been transferred from Markley Hall. Hurrying back to Markley, Wilke discovered election officials already tallying votes. The polls were closed, but Wilke was allowed to vote anyway. "When I was walking over there, I was thinking that if I didn't vote and Wheeler lost. I'd feel bad," she said afterwards. "I knew it would be a close race." WAS IT LSA senior Pat Wiegand? "I was just going to skip class and go home," Wiegand said yesterday. But he wound up in class and decided that as long as he was on his way home, he might as well stop and vote. Or was it another LSA senior who switched votes in the booth? "I got in the voting booth and pulled down the Belcher level. Then I looked at it and wondered why I had done it," he said. The man then switched the Belcher lever for the Wheeler lever, opened the curtain, and left. "Now I wonder why I did that," he added ruefully. See THEY, Page 2 PROFESSOR FORD put in a full day yesterday - hustling from morn to night. The tanned alumnus began the day with two undergraduate classes: Pol- itics of Civil Liberties and Am- erican Chief Executive. He was received well at each session and devoted most of the time to questions. At left, he fils Betty's shoes at an American Cancer Society meeting at the Ann Arbor Inn. Academia beckoned him back to Mason Hall to speak with some graduate students about the American Chief Executive and Legislative Behavior. The Secret Service agents, with the help of shifts, were able to keep up with Ford as he finished up the day with a Martha Cook din- ner and a meeting with last summer's Washington Interns at the Michigan League. T o d a y: Legislative Process and Public Administration in Lane Hall at 10:00; Introduction to American Politics in Rackham at 2:00; and at 3:00 Political Environment of Public Admin- istration. Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER etysstand-in OK w ihCancer Society By EILEEN DALEY Betty Ford wasn't able to attend a luncheon held in her honor by the Washtenaw County branch of the American Cancer Society yesterday, but no one was disappointed with her' stand-in. Stepping in for Mrs. Ford was her husband, former president Gerald Ford. Mrs. Ford had been scheduled to speak before the crowd of 300 at the Ann Arbor Inn, but was unavailable due to illness. Ford explained that his wife was exhausted after traveling over 34,0(00 miles since he left office last January, He smiled and said he suggested to Betty that they "go back to the White Housein 1980 and get some rest." Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN POLL. SCI. WITH A PRESIDENT: Newest prof makes smash debut of to THE LUNCHEON was held to kick-off a drive to raise a goal $106,800.00 for the American Cancer Society, and to pay tribute Betty Ford. Mrs. Ford underwent surgery to rerhove a cancerous breast in 1974. After her operation, she waged a campaign to encourage the early detection of cancer, particularly breast cancer. The American Cancer Society credits her with saving the lives of thousands of women. In addition to Ford, Mayor Albert Wheeler and Lt. Governor James Damman also spoke at the benefit. DAMMAN PROCLAIMED April as Cancer Control Month in By BRIAN BLANCHARD and PATTY MONTEMURRI Professor Gerald Ford, ac- companied by an army of stern- faced Secret Service agents, scurried around campus yester- day leaving scores of satisfied political science students, and spectators in his wake. Three classes, two under- graduate and one graduate, lis- tened to the former President lecture and field questions dur- ing the first of his four days as an adjunct political science pro- applause as he entered Politics of Civil Liberties, an under- graduate course with an enroll- ment of 100. Each of the stu- dents had to display a ticket made by the political science de- partment to keep outsiders from crashing the class. The five uniformed Ann Arbor police and approximately six (they are constantly circulating and fading into the woodwork) blue-suited Secret Service men set up a temporary headquarters next door in the English Depart- his attitudes towards the Su- preme Court, the Stevens ap- pointment, and the attempt to impeach Douglas." The remarks which opened the hour-long session were "a lit- tle bit drier and more dignified than (Professor Milton) Heu- mann's regular lectures," re- called senior Peggy King. But she said. "Most people looked at'- him as a resource material, not a president." Heumann said that his stu- dents most appreciated the to avoid Supreme Court deseg- regation orders by government provokes non-compliance and vi- olence among the people affect- ed by the laws. Junior Eileen Horowitz asked Ford about human rights and its impact on the SALT talks. "He said it will take time to see if it was a diplomatic error or not " she reported. Heumann agreed with students who described the president as "credible" and "well prepared." "It wasn't a cute. gimmicky