For Daily subscriptions, phone 764-0558 FROSH SUPPLEMENT See Inside Y 111k t~ P43aitti FROSHI SUPPLEMENT See inside Latest Deadline in the State a v vvvl ._ Y _.L .I )I.. LAXAV I , INo. I Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 9, 1976 Free Issue Seventv Pnnp- .. .... ....FreeacIssuir y guy=:~ :zo *b IU SEE NEWS tAPPE4 NCAtLL IDtY Come see about us If you too would like to spend hours pouring over wire copy, days tracking down elusive sourc- es, evenings writing headlines and drawing layouts, not to mention plenty of time with -razed but lovable staffers, then the Daily is your ind of place. Whether your passion is photogra- ;, phy, your fetish football coverage or your forte 2ature writing, rest assured there's a place for ou in our big, happy family. We'll be holding meetings for newcomers in the near future, so keep an eye out on this column for news of their time and date. A bribe to subscribe We'd like to be your friend. And as everyone knows good friends are prone to spending lots of time together. So, if it's okay with you, we'd like to visit each and every morning and, as Mick Jagger says, maybe even spend the night togeth- er. If this sounds like an attractive, arrangement just give the folks in our subscription department a call at 764-0558 and, in no time, we'll be on your loorstep at the break of down just in time for lanka and Sugar Pops, the bearers of both good md bad news, sports finals and features, cartoons nd classifieds, But, just as all friendships have teir price, so does this one - a mere $6:50 per erm or $12 for Fall and Winter. If you live out- de of Ann Arbor it's just a fast buck more. l utomated errors The University's computer, being every bit a fallible as most of the humans around cam- ,s, may have given you the irr sssion that ie or more of the classes on your schedule dis- ppeared during the summer. Don't tear up your ourse list yet, though - chances are the class s still waiting for you. The computer simply bstituted the phrase "class not available" if .'wasn't sure where and when the section was .upposed to meet. Check a copy of the final all time schedule or call POINT-40 to find out ;hether you'r' out of luck. With a helmet on? He may find his old uniform has gotten a pit snug over the years, but football coach Bo .chembechler says his most touted Wolverine alumnus is welcome to attend one of the team's practices any time he wants to. The alumnus s Gerald Ford, whose notoriety has grown con- siderably since his athletic heydays in 1934 when e was making headlines on sports pages as he Wolverines' Most Valuable Player. "I am a terry Ford supporter," Schembechler told sports riters Tuesday at his first weekly luncheon. He's welcome at my football practice any time e wants to come." Asked if he thought Ford, ,ho will kick off his re-election campaign in nn Arbor next week, could still play center, chembechler responded, "No, but I'll bet a >t of people would come to see if he could." Sig Mack If compromise is what successful marriages 'e made of, Jerry Root and Verna Coger are f to a good start. Unable to agree on whether ey should be married in the Lower Peninsula the Upper Peninsula they agreed to tie the tot Labor Day near the middle of the Mack- ac Bridge, which spans the two peninsulas at e Straits of Mackinac. A regional dispute prompt- I the unique wedding site choice -- Root being Om Battle Creek in the Lower Peninsula and e bride being from Newberry in the U.P. But e dispute ended peacefully, as the 26,500 people ho attended the annual Labor Day bridge walk well as Gov. William Milliken are able to 'test to. "You couldn't ask for a more beauti- 1 setting," said the happy groom. "Anyway, by not on Labor Day when the governor and ieryone else is there?" Jappenings . . . ... are slim today, but you've probably got tough things to worry about already. CRISP in operation for early registration and drop- dds from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., but you'll need 'ermits for both procedures ... GEO holds a teward's meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the tackham E. Conference Rm. ... Don Riegle and Ed Pierce, respectively the Democratic candi- dates for U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Rep- resentatives, will speak tonight in Aud. C at An- gell Hall at 8:00. If your group or club is spon- soring a free campus event, call us at 764-0552 by 3 p.m. on the day preceeding your happen- ing, and we'll slip it into this space. dn the inside . .. Producing a 68-page newspaper may be all 1n "1 nio-ht's work fnr The 1i VNrk1'Tna, , Tm o VA murder suspects await trial By GEORGE LOBSENZ There was finally a break this summer in the most baffling murder case in Ann Arbor history, when police arrested two nurses in connection with the mysterious deaths of 11 patients at the Ann Arbor Veteran's Administration (VA) Hospital. The deaths occured in the summer ,of 1975 when over 50 VA Hospital }patients suffered breathing failures. The victims, it was soon found, had all suffered the failures during or after an intravenous injection that had somehow been poisoned. THE FBI WAS called in to investigate, but it was not until ten months later that Fillipina Narcisco, 30, of Ypsilanti, and Leonora Perez, 31, then of Ann Arbor, were indicted. Even after the arrests many continued to question whether foul play was involved at all. In mid-July, a night nurse at the VA hospital and a local free-lance writer announced that they had given the FBI information which would exonerate the two women. Both claimed that the FBI had failed to thoroughly investigate the possibility that intravenous fluid, contaminated upon arrival at the hospital, was responsible for the mysterious deaths and poisonings. MEANWHILE, THE suspects had already entered pleas of not guilty at their respective arraignments. And government prosecutors had hinted that they knew the motive for the bizarre crimes, but said it would not be revealed until the trial com- menced in December or later. The lack of a motive had plagued the investigation from the start. In August, 1975 a frustrated hospital hierarchy first called on the FBI to investigate the breathing failures. But officials termed the murder theory "the most bizarre and far-out" explana- tion for the situation. If investigators couldn't find a villain, they at least dis- covered what had been internally responsible for the breathing lapses - a powerful muscle-relaxing drug called Pavulon. De- scribed as potentially lethal, the drug makes breathing impossible without the aid of mechanical respirators. The drug was discov- ered in an intravenous tube connected to one of the victims, though it was absent from tubes connected to other victims. THE ONLY OTHER lead was the discovery'of another breath- suppressing drug in the refrigerator of the intensive care unit-- the ward where most of the-failures took place, and a rare loca- tion for that drug. In response to these findings, hospital officials decided to stop all non-emergency surgery pending the results of the FBI inquiry. Results were slow in coming. By September, suspicions that a killer was on the loose had intensified among investigators. Stricter security measures were instituted as some 20 FBI agents fanned out through the hospital. They found that many of the arrests had occurred in the intensive care unit and all had come during the 3:30 p.m.-midnight shift. LATER IN SEPTEMBER, the agents confirmed that Pavulon had been found in urine samples of two victims. Intravenous medi- cation was singled out as the apparent method for introducing the drug. A VA pathologist commented, "It is very unlikely that Pavu- Ion was administered accidentally." The FBI said it had nar- rowed its list of suspects to a mere "several hundred" as they continued to interview the 700 members of the hospital staff. Later in September, the hospital returned to near normal, See MURDER, Page 2 U, GEG still apa rt on issues Both sides agree to mediation By JIM TOBIN With only 22 days left before the Graduate Em- p o y e s' Organization's (GEO) strike deadline, the University and the union this week submitted their labor dispute to a state mediator. If the sides fail to make significant progress before October 5, the campus may plunge into the type of turmoil generated by the union's walkout in Febru- ary, 1975. Appointed by the Michigan Employment Relations Com- mission, mediator Richard Ba- doud will consult with both parties and make recommen- dations for a settlement. Though mediation failed to solve the 1975 dispute, nego- tiators say they hope the pro- cess will prevent the chaos of a strike. STILL administrators are not optimistic - department heads have already been encouraged to develop plans for coping with i walkout. While the bargain- ing teams quibbled over rela- tively minor issues all summer, the big ones - wages, affirma- tive actionsand non-discrimina- tions - waited omniously. Early in May chief Univer- sity negotiator John Forsyth said of the union's major pro- posals: "There is no way in the world this institution can meet theirdemands. Based on present facts, if they are not prepared to come down in their demands then we are not pre- pared to have a contract set- tlement." The "present facts" in major areas of disagreement have changed little since then, and while tough talk like Forsyth's often dissolves as bargaining goes to the wire, the Univer- sity may indeed stand firm on certain positions. THESE DISPUTES seem the most likely to lead to a strike: -Economics. The GEO has demanded an 11 per cent aver- age pay raise and a 50 per cent cut in tuition. The Univer- sity has offered a five per cent pay raise and a freeze on tuition at current levels. The five per cent raise combined with the "tuition grant" averages out to a 3.2 per cent raise and less tuition than non-teaching gradu- ate students must pay. -Affirmative action. The sub- ject of much disagreement among diverse campus factions, "affirmative action" is the con- cept of encouraging recruitment of hiring minorities and women. The matter was fought over dur- ing the 1975 strike as well, re- sulting in an , agreement that the University would establish certain "goals and timetables" See 'U', Page 9 rate hikes prove a double whammy By KEN PARSIGIAN There are only two things certain here at the University-the football team will cap a fine season with a loss to Ohio State roughly four out of five years and the outrageous amount you pay to go to school here will increase at the same outlandish pace. This year is no exception. Not only were the Wolverines trounched by the Buckeye contingent in their last meeting but, likewise, the students were tackled by the Universiy Board of Regents who raised both tuition and dorm rates. TUITION, WHICH was hiked over nine per cent, will cost in- state underclasspersons $928 per year, $80 more than last year, while tuition for in-state juniors-and seniors will be $1052, up $92 from last year. Outstate students, the hardest hit by the increase, will see their tuition costs climb above the $3000 mark. These increases came only two months after the Regents approved an average 8.9 per cent dorm rate hike. The cost of a dorm double was raised $111, from $1400 to $1511, while the cost of a single is up from $1565 to $1753. The need for a tuition hike is directly attributable to the amount of funding the University is getting from the state. Al- though Gov. William Milliken's proposed budget called or a $1.48 million increase in state funds for the University, it is still below the level of the 1974 budget because of last year's $1.6 million budget cut. See 'U', Page 2 D~oilv Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Freshperson Kathy Huebner, from Redding, Calif., typifies the exasperation of thousands of University students as she moves her b elongings into South Quad. Students make their move By SUSAN ADES While some students are already preen- ing themselves for their collegiate roles, tot- ing armloads of text books home to the shelves, other muscle-fatigued Ann Arborites are still busy making their houses and dorm rooms into homes. Trunks, mattresses and stereo paraphernalia are slowly making the trip up endless flights of stairs and into narrow elevators. There's no mistaking it-summer's over. Dorms have been the backdrops for the most concentrated pandemonium of the past few days with as many as 1,500 people des- cending upon gargantuan halls like Markley. As if moving isn't enough trouble, the bustle is sometimes aggravated by mug shot opera- tions for meal cards and dorm due collec- tions. The assaults on sanity run rampant. And when the trauma of settling in be- gins to wane, some fledgling dorm residents look askance at institutional food - "At or- ientation I ate nothing but yogurts," said Lisa, a new Markley dweller, "But I guess now I'll have to eat." And then there's the ultimate in life-style alteration for the freshperson in a co-ed dorm - the co-ed hall. See STUDENTS, Page 2 POSTILL CHARGED WITH ASSAULT: Jail for the sheri~ff? By LANI JORDAN Following an unusually leng- thy six-day preliminary exam- ination, 14th district court Judge Henry Arkison last month or- dered Washtenaw County Sher- iff Fred Postill bound over for trial on charges of felonious assault. Postill was arraigned before Circuit Court Judge Patrick Conlin Sept. 2, with pre-trial hearings scheduled for Septem- cuffs while attempting to arrest him for fighting. On Aug. 23, four days after Arkison's decision, Postill and jail administrator Frank Don- ley, also a participant in the incident, filed $250,000 lawsuits charging Baysinger with assault and demanding payment for physical and mental damages. Postill suffered a concussion and required 14 facial stitches following the brawl. Most witnesses testified that they did not see either the gun or handcuffs during the inci- dent but others stated that the handcuffs had been used prop- erly. Postill testified that he had attempted to break up a fight which started when Donley called Baysinger a liar. The sheriff said he was punched from behind by Baysinger and made two attempts to arrest ,,'...-*'*..**.'... f '.'.___ , " "; l