Wednesday, October 20, 1976 .THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three .. .., jury selection h' contanues PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-While jury selection proceeded in se- cret yesterday in the John Har- vey Adamson trial, the county's chief prosecutor said there may be further indictments soon in the murder of investigative re- porter Don Bolles. S Were close," said Maricopa' County Attorney Donald Harris. "We're real close." HARRIS SAID in an interview that he believes "five or six or maybe seven people" still at large were involved in a plotI to kill Bolles. The suspects, he said, are pgo- ple with money who might have paid to eliminate Adamson, who is being kept under tight securi- ty during the trial. "We're talking about people who are pretty well-to-do types," he said. "There are people who will do anything for a price." I"WE'RE TRYING not to lose our link in this crime," Harris said. Such concerns, he said, explain the extraordinary secur- ity surrounding Adamson, the 32-year-old greyhound dog breed- s- er on trial for Bolles' murder. al- Harris estimated the trial dy would last three weeks. He said er a jury should be sworn before nd week's end. Although the Bolles murder nd has attracted nationwide pub- to licity, Harris said his deputies d. orosecuting the case are try- al ing to treat it as an ordinary e- mirder trial. al- The 47-year-old Bolles, a re-1 ut porter for the Arizona Republic, ce was killed in a gangland-style ng bombing of his car as he drove ,z- away from a Phoenix hotel he where he was lured by an in- he formant promising a big story. The newsman fought an 11-day ed battle for life before he died v- June 13. ... ......... .....,. .ry*..Y1X 1J .*.*'"::."...* t. . .*.*.*. . . .:: . .:4**: **...** . D.. . . . . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Wednesday, October 20, 1976 R. C. Lectures: John King, "The' Oct. 22 - Eastman Kodak Co., K- Day Calendar 9merican Work Ethic," Greene Mart Apparel. WUOM: Speaking of American Lounge, E Quad, 7 pm. Phone 764-7460 for information on Music-"Electronic Music," with Computing Ctr.: Brice Carnahan, the following: guests, M. BmbbittChas.Dodge& 'Running Time - Shared Jobs in CEW scholarships fo" women ava guHestmodeBabbtoteanDoder& MTS," Nat. Sdi. Aud., 7:30 pm. CEW scholarsh'ps for women Mengelberg, 11 am. Music School: Chamber Orches- available to women whose education Psychiatry: Seymour S. Kety, tra, Hill; 8 pm. has been interrupted for at least 24 Harvard Med. School, "The Biolog Musical Society: Baroque Music months and who are pursuing an ical Substrates of Schizophrenia," Masters, Rackham Aud., 8:30 pm. act.demic or prof. degres program, OPH Aud., 9:30 am.d R Cl Potr readin Bob full or part-time, CREES: Brown bag, ."Jobs for 'lifford, Bill Milray, Greene Lounge, Residency in Hospital Pharmacy CREES concentrators and how to E Quad, 9:30 pm. available at Rhode Island Hosp., Hget Them," Commons rm., Lane CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT Providence R.I. Hall, noon. 3200 SAB, 764-7456 Fellowships & internships for Arch., Urban Planning: Leon PDsi lnclP Pastalan 'The Stimulation of Age RECRUITING ON CAMPUS: P i lPsychology avail- Related Sensory Losses," 2104 Art, Oct. 20 - Rike's, The Procter & bwihPheDeua & also in Calif. & inPhi4 elphia &as nClf Arch Bladg, 1:30 pm. Gamble Distributing Co., Providence Texas., ISMRRD: Wm. M. Cruickshank, Hospital, Lord & Taylor. "The Beginnings of Perceptual- Oct. 21 - Pre-law Conference - Mademoiselle, College Board/Guest Conceptual Research with Mentally Over 35 law schools will have reps Editor Competition - A salaried Retarded, Learning Disabled Chil- on campus to provide info. on pro- month as Guest Editor, working dren I," 130 S. 1st, 3-5 pm. grams, financial aid, curriculum & with regular editors in N.Y. office; Ethics, Religion / Canterbury admissions. All students are invited details available at CP&P. House: "Last Lecture Series," H. to attend. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Skolimowki, Aud. A, Angell, 4 pm. I Michigan League. WORKS ON PAPER CRESSMAN CASSARA STEWART & Selected Student Works OCT. 19-NOV. 7 RECEPTION: Oct. 20, 7-9 HOYJRS: Tu. & Fri., 10-6 Weekends, 12-6 764-3234 UNION GALLERY First Floor, Michigan Union AP Photo Wrong way Nanyuki, a 60-pound baby rhino, looks like he's about to get separated from his mother Mu- lenda. Nanyuki was born at the San Diego Wild Animal Park last Friday. American hanged in Nassau I I f ii E r y BERGMAN SERIES 1960 THE DEVIL'S EYE Bergman's spoof of the Don Juan legand as it affects the preverse Swedish temperment. Don Juan is sent from hell to seduce a virgin in this highly ironic sophisticated comedy." Jarl Kulla, Bibi Anderson and Alex Dubery. THURS: 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. Admission $1.25 NASSAU, The Bahamas (AP) floor under Shobek and send- - In a common grave strewn ing the doomed man to a cham- with the bones of forgotten ber below. The rope was then paupers and murderers, Mich- removed and he was pronounc- aiah Shobek of Milwaukee was! ed dead by prison physician buried yesterday after being Victoriano Fermo. hanged for murder. An official notice of Shobek's The 22-year-old handyman was: execution, in accordance with executed for the slaying of Ir- Bahamian law, was then post- win Bornstein, a New York ac- ed outside the main entrance countant. It was 29 months ago of the stone-walled Fox Hill pri- that he confessed to that mur- son, five miles east of Nassau. der and to the slayings of Ka- Shobek's mother, Juanita tie Smith, a 17-year-old Detroit Spencer, a Milwaukee cleaning tourist and Paul Howell, a Mas- woman, stayed home. "There's sillon, Ohio, lawyer.' nothing I can do now to save HE SAID then that his vic- him," she had said. tims were "angels of Lucifer" A LEGAL AID Society law- and that God told him to com- yer, Thomas Cannon, tried to mit the murders. halt the execution, pleading with Shobek was awakened at 6:30 President Ford's chief of staff a.m. yesterday and had a break- in a 45-mipute telephone call fast of orange juice, bread, sau- at about midnight yesterday. sage, grits and coffee, a pri- The lawyer said Ford, who ear- son official said. lier relayed an appeal from A short time later, his arms Spencer's mother, could not be- bound by his side and his feet come further involved in Ba- secured. Shobek was taken to hamian affairs. J J { I i 9 said the U.S. Embassy in Na sau told him it would costa most $1,000 to have the bo embalmed, put in a contain acceptable to Customs an flown back to Milwaukee. "SHE IS A cleaning lady an simply does not have accesst those kinds of funds," he sai Shobek's execution and buri was conducted under tight s curity. Reporters were nota lowed near the prison. Abo two dozen uniformed poli manned a barricade, keepin about 150 spectators and a do en newsmen away from th Old Trail Cemetery, where h was buried. The area had been bulldoz only two weeks ago when gra es for Shobek and two othe were dug. The ground was ro ky and human bones littere the surface. The corner of a other pine coffin protruded in the bottom of Shobek's unmar ed grave. A planned demonstration 1 a religious-oriented group d not materialize, possibly b cause of heavy rain that fe during the night and ear morning. "This is strange," said o spectator near the cemeter "The sun always shines whe someone is hanged." ANN AUUCU FI [LM CC-CED) TONIGHT The ANN ARBOR PREMIERE of ANDREI TARKOVSKY'S 1972 SOLARIS -CANCELLED BY THE DISTRIBUTOR- LAST TANGO IN PARIS BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI 1973 AUD. A 7 & 9:30 Marion Brando appears as a sexually aggres- sive expatriate who embarks on a three day affair with Jeanne (Marie Schneider), a young modish Parisienne. The affair is pure- ly physical, isolated experience, and the apartment an island in which are examined certain aspects of human relationships. With Jean-Pierre Leaud. Music by Gato Barbieri. "A fim that has made the strongest impres- sion on me in[ almost twenty years of review- ing."-Pauline Kael. Rated X. the gallows room next to the cell where he had been placed 48 hours before. A black hood was placed over his head and a half-inch thick nylon rope was put around his neck. A HOODED civilian pulled a red switch from a closet-like room nearby, releasing thel Ms. " - ncer heard the news of he son's death on the ra- dio after keeping a night-long vigil with members of her fam- ily. Cannon said Spencer's moth- er had told him she wanted her son's body returned to Milwau- kee but could not afford it. He rs c- ed, In- to k- by id e- ell ly ne y. en THE MICHIGAN DAILV Volume LXXXVII, No. 36 Wednesday, October 20, 1976 is edited and managed by studentsI at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Published d a il y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity yearmat 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning, Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor ..... is looking for: SPECIAL EVENTS COORDINATORS Help plan and organize events like dances, symposiums, contests, etc. PLEASE CONTACT: 2nd Floor, M. Union 763-1107 __ _I t , A Mh Oia MMo N 1Mt 1 1 f pw l t+ Mu i' d Probably not. All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And you're eating regularly. But... But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coin of the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around. Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves it's costingus now for repairs and inefficiency. Point two..By taking more pride in our work we'll more than likely see America regaining its strength in the competitive world trade arena. When the balance of payments swings our way again we'll all be better off economically. So you see-the only person who can really do what you do any better is you. A..mapi% I t nu' wke II