ARMS EMBARGO See Editorial Page Y it 4UU6 :43, a t ty MIDDLISH High-4 d Law-30° See Today for details r Latest Deadline in the State :.. Vol. LXXXVII, No. 37 4 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 21, 1976 Ten Cents Ten Pages IFYOU SEE NMS APPECA 'Door prize President Ford had a bit of trouble getting his news conference started yesterday, in a scene worthy of NBC's Saturday Night show. "Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States," came the introduction as Ford was scheduled to appear for his second news conference in six days. There was a desperate rattling of a door knob, followed by perhaps a full minute of awkward silence. The door knob had come off in some- one's haid. Finally the President entered, smil- ing, from a side door. "I guess we'd better go back to the Rose Garden," he said, referring to an area outside the White House where he occasionally meets with reporters. "We had a door knob to break off." Honor the dead We're surprised they didn't cancel school alto- gether. Today is Will Carleton Day in Michigan, and throughout the state, teachers are supposed to tell their students all about Will Carleton. No, he's not a former vice presidential candi- date, he's the state's official (if obscure) poet, and although he's been dead for 64 years, a 1919 state law requires teachers to observe his Octo- ber 21 birthday. While there's no penalty for overlooking this milestone in history, the law suggests teachers read his work in classes or offer some other "proper and fitting observance." Recognizing our civic duty, The Daily herewith offers Carleton's most famous opus, "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse": "Over the hill to the poorhouse I'm trudgin' my weary way .- 'I, a woman of seventy, and only a trifle gray' - I who am smart' and chipper, for all the years I've told, As many another woman that's only' half as old." We're touched. Happenings ..., start rolling at noon today in the Union's Pendleton Center, where David. Ackley speaks on "Primitive Art ..." The American Association of University Women begins its annual used book sale at noon in the-Union Ballroom. It runs through Oct. 23 ... There is a Hopwood Tea from 3-5 in the Hopwood Rm. 1006 Angell Hall ... William Niskanen, Jr., speaks on "The Economic and Fis- cal Effects on the Popular Vote for the Presi- dent," 3:30 in Lecture Rm. 2 of the MLB ... The Madelon Pound House, 1024 Hill is :the site of a discussion on "Child Care Options for In- ternational Families, and it starts at 3:30 ... The U-M Ski Club holds a general meeting and dis- cussion on its winter vacation ski trip, in the Kuenzel Rm. of the Union at 7 ... David Oleshan- sky reads his poetry at the Guild House, 802 Monroe, at 7:30 ... The Intervarsity Christian Fel- lowship meets at the League, at 7:30 ... The Ann Arbor Area Ostomy Association meets at 7:30 at the Senior Citizens Guild, 502 W. Huron ... Frances Large speaks on "The Militarization of Our Youth" at a meeting of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, 7:30, at the home of Betty Musgrave, 2460 'James ... The Residential College Players present three one-act plays. Chekhov's "The Bear," Strindberg's "Playing with Fire," and "The Winetree Thing" by Tim Prentiss, at 8 in the RC Auditorium. Admission is $1.00 and it will run through Oct. 23 ... It's also opening night for Alice's Comedy Theater in Alice's Res- taurant in (you guessed it) Alice Lloyd Hall, at 10:30. It's an original show ... One last reminder: the time for graduation portraits has been ex- tended to Wednesday, Oct. 27. You can make an appointment on the Diag or call 764-0561 be- tween 4-6. It only takes fire minutes and its free. Empty classrooms In a reversal of expectations and the trend here at the University, a survey of the nation's higher education institutions indicates that college enrollments may have declined about one per cent this fall to an estimated 11,126,000. Dr. Gar- land Parker, who conducted the research at the University of Cincinnati, called his preliminary findings a "surprise and a shock," adding that predictions had called for a 4.5 per cent in- crease in enrollments. Parker said that if the findings are borne - out in a broader study next spring, it will be the first such decline since 1951. 1 Spare the rod Psychologist John Valusek has a simple cure for'violence in America: Stop spanking children. Valusek, a psychological consultant, told the Utah Association for Mental Health this week that paren- tal spanking promotes the notion that violence against others is legitimate. "Spanking is the first half-inch on the yardstick of violence," he said. "It is followed by hitting and ultimately by rape, murder and assassination. The modeling behavior that occurs at home sets the stage: 'I will resort to violence when I don't know what else to do.' " On the inside... The Arts Page features a preview of the Keith Jarrett concert by Jim Stimson ... Editorial Page offers an article about the presidential candidates by Doug Timms ... and Tom Cameron covers the hsckrthan1 rsnen for Snorts Levi prob( rule of out Ford role II' cove By AP and Reuter Attorney General Edward Levi yesterday announced t h e Justice Department would not investigate alle- gations linking President Ford with the Nixon ad- ministration's Watergate cover-up. Levi said there was no credible evidence, new or old, to justify a further in- vestigation into whether Ford, then a Congressman, perjured himself in Con- gressional hearings. TWO MEMBERS of Congress had formally asked Levi to in- vestigate Ford's role in the cov- er-up after the allegations by former Nixon aide John Dean. Dean has said that Ford helped to block an early Con- gressional investigation of the Watergate break-in after con- sultations with the Nixon White Hloose. In other campaign news yes- terday - the 13th day before the election - there were these developments: 9 Ford held an afternoon press conference in which he attacked Jimmy Carter's stand on the Arab boycott against Is- rael, brushed aside rumors that he would pardon Watergate fe- lons, and said he intends to keep Gen. George Brown, chair- man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, despite his controversial re- marks on U. S. support for Is- rael. P Carter,gstaying home ,,in Plains, Georgia,: prepped for his debate tomorrow night, the last of three televised showdowns with Ford. Levi said in a statement the Justice department had care- fully studied Dean's latest re- marks and previous Congres- sional testimony as well as Ford's testimony in hearings to confirm his nomination as vice- President. The Department also studied the denials of Dean's allegations by the two former Nixon aides he had named as liaison men between the White House and Ford - William Timmons and Richard Cook. IN ADDITION, he said, "the Department has also considered the times and circumstances un- der which these recent and past statements and testimony were given" and had also contacted former special prosecutor Leon See LEVI, Page 2 Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS FILIPINA NARCISO AND LEONIE PEREZ, accused of the V. A. Hospital murders, give their side of the story yesterday in a campus area M ethodist church. .VAnurses detai1 probe Student surrenders in Detroit drug bust r By GEORGE LOBSENZ Poised and relaxed, the two Filipino nurses accused of us- ing a paralyzing drug to murder and poison patients at Ann Ar- bor's Veteran's Administration (VA) Hospital offered their version of the story yesterday, describing the FBI investigation that has surrounded them since the summer of 1975. In their second appearance in the Ann Arbor - Ypsilanti area, Filipina "P.I." Narciso and Leonie Perez quietly fielded questions from a sympathetic A University law student sur- rendered to federal officials in Detroit yesterday in connection with a major durg bust which saw the arrests of several Uni- versity graduates for smuggling cocaine to the Ann Arbor area. Ronald Rossi, 24, of Utica, was held in lieu of $25,000 bond yesterday. His arrest was the eleventh in the series which culminated an approximately two-year investigation by fed- eral Drug Enforcement Admin- istration (DEA) agents. DEA OFFICIALS staid Neil and Mary Ison, both University graduates, were the leaders of the ring which renortedly smug- gled $6 million worth of cocaine from Bolivia andPeru into the IJ.S. via student carriers. The Isons have not been arrested. Though Ann Arbor police were not involved in the raids, Po- lice Chief Walter Krasny said the department had been aware of the DEA investigation. Kras- ny said the arrests would prob-" ably curtail significantly the flow, of cocaine in Ann Arbor and the Detroit area for awhile, but that "someone else'll come up with a new idea and they'll be back in business." Officials said. Neil Ison, 27, and his wife Mary Ison, 23, left Ann Arbor in April, apparently dropping the operation to live off their tremendous profits. Thev own expensive homes in Las Vegas and in the Bahamas. Twenty-four persons were :-',irged in the grand iury in- di^tment. including Rossi, the Tsons, and several former Uni- versity st"dents. The ring dis- See STUDENTS, Page 3 'Candidates' Night' adds little insighit to county, judicial races By MIKE NORTON Candidates for six county of- fices and two local judgeships aired their opinions at City Hall last night in the second of three Candidates' Nights sponsored by the Ann Arbor League of Women Voters. In tone, the two-and-a-half hour sessipn ranged from bland to brutal, depending on the contest involved. Some of the would-be county officers and judges fought bitterly with their opponents, while others seem- ed relatively unconcerned about their prospects for election. IN THE RACE for County Prosecutor, incumbent Repub- lican William Delhey opened by listing his years of experi- ence and telling the audience "the only issue here is evperi- ence and ability." His opponent, Democrat George Steeh, "has only been out of law school for three years," said Delhey. But Steeh, when his turn to sneak arrived, attacked Delhey for what he called "negligence in preparing cases." "Twenty-three per cent of the cases brought by the County Prosecutor's officeharedismiss- ed outright," charged Steeh, who blamed sloppy procedures in Delhey's staff for the dis- missals. THERE WERE few sur- prises in the speeches from the two candidates for the county circuit court's new fifth judge- ship. Shirley Burgoyne made her often - repeated warning to the audience that her opponent -- Henry Conlin - was not to be confused with any other Con- lins who are local judges, and outlined her plan to transfer domestic court cases to a spe- cial Domestic Section which she would handle. "I don't feel a judge in cir- cuit court can just specialize in one particular -thing," Conlin replied. "And I assure you, such a thing isn't possible." For his part, Conlin stressed once more his lifelong ties to the community, and his "vast experience in practice." THE CONTEST for County Clerk features an incumbent Republican, Robert Harrison, who boasted of his record in eight -years of office. "I intend to keep this office running like a business office," he said. His Democratic challenger, ,Janet Klaver, was quick to add that "the County Clerk's office should not only be efficient and accurate, but also courteous and helpful." She criticized Harrison for alleged "high- handedness" and "inaccuracy" in keeping records. Libertarian candidate for Clerk, Brenda Manning, said she would do the job if elected, but wasn't particularly interest- ed in the office itself. She said' she was running "to inform the public about the Libertarian Party." THE SPEECHES for the 14th District Court race revealed an incumbent Thomas Shea who See COUNTY, Page 3 audience of some 30 persons at a campus - area Methodist church. THE TWO have been charged with using the muscle - paralyz- ing drug Pavulon to murder five patients at the VA Hospital and poison ten others. Carefully side - stepping ques- tions they felt could lead to im- proper pre-trial commentary on their part, the two women spoke about the atmosphere in the hospital at the time of the poisonings. According to Narciso, the general staff was left in the dark during the crisis period. "THE HEAD nurse went to the chief of staff and asked what was going on," related Narciso, "but they didn't tell her anything,- we never got any answers." Narciso said that when the FBI entered the case in mid- August, 1975, they immediately focused their suspicion on her. "They told me, 'P.L., it's you'. The FBI told me that," Narciso said. Later, she said, investiga- tors also turned their attention to Perez. As the investigation concen- trated more and more on her, Narciso "said, she was taken off See VA, Page 7 I Proposal A conflict brews By STU McCONNELL On the radio a soothing voice urged voters to defeat Proposal A, the so-called "bottle bill" which would ban throwaway beverage containers in Michigan. Why, it asked, should everyone pay for the sins of a few litterers? Meanwhile, Tom Moran was making plans for a statewide hike in support of the proposal. "People are mad," he said. "They're sick and tired of hearing those ads." Moran and two other supporters are taking the walk as a fund-raising drive and as a "media event" for the cause of returnables. THUS THE TWO sides have squared away in a massive contest for public opinion which may well influence the outcome of the November 2 referendum. Local action in support of the proposal has included canvassing homes, staging clean-up drives and working to promote the statewide march, scheduled to pass through Ann Arbor on ' the way to Detroit on October 28. "The walk dramatizes the need for Proposal A by pointing out all cans and bottles along the highway, sort of like a walk for hunger," ex- plained Murray Schrotenbore of Help Abolish Throwaways, a local pro-Proposal A group. See PROPOSAL, Page 7 10 vie for state Supreme Court Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS LABOR PARTY Senate- candidate, Peter Signorelli, blasts .Jemocrats in a Daily interview yesterday. Socialist Senate hopmeful hits Dems By JIM TOBIN U. S. Labor Party Senate candidate Peter Signorelli yes- terday said "a vote for Jimmy Carter is a vote for nuclear war" and called Donald Riegle, his Democratic opponent, "one of the most immoral candidates running." On a brief swing through Ann Arbor, Signorelli blasted the Democratic Party's employment programs and pointed to the Labor Party's vision of a strong new world economy, its chief element being the establishment of an international bank which would direct massive efforts to strengthen un- By MARGARET YAO First of three parts Judicial races rarely draw much attention, but this year's state Supreme Court race should turn some heads if only because there are so many can- didates - ten in the fight for three vacant seats. Although only one seat was scheduled to come before voters this year, vacancies left by the death of Thomas M. Kavanagh and the resignation of John Swainson, convicted on three counts of perjury, have opened up two more of the seven seats on the state's highest court. IN BRIEF, the nominees are: -for the regular eight-year term, incumbent Thomas G. Kavanagh - Democrat (no re- lation to Thomas M. Kavanagh), Roman Gribbs - Democrat, Wilson Hurd - Libertarian, Judge Joseph Swallow - Re- publican, James Wells - Amer- ican Independent; -for the' remaining six years of Thomas M. Kavanagh's term, incumbent Justice Law- rence Lindemer - Republican (appointed in 1975), Zolton Fer- ency - Human Rights, and Blair Moody, Jr. - Democratd -for the remaining two years of (,zrninzn, c.G torm inr--, all the candidates acknowledge, many will vote simply -by name identification. Some even say that. name recognition is the key to winning a judicial elec- tion. CHIEF JUSTICE Thomas Giles Kavanagh unhesitantly admits that his name has "with- out question been an asset" to him. The late Thomas M. Kava- nagh had been a Supreme Court judge since 1958. Kavanagh, 58, is running for his second term, exercising his right as an incumbent to nomi- nate himself. The Democratic party rejected him for renomi- nation - igniting much of the furor over thestate's* selection pro(r'ess - in favor of Gribbs. The Chief Justice served four v rc an tho etntp ('rt af An- Gribbs, former mayor of De- troit, has charged that the court has not practiced enough judi- cial restraint, "often invading the province of the legislative and executive branches," and should move more quickly through the docket. Gribbs says his administra- tive experience will aid, the bench in dealing with the lower courts. Before his term as may- or, 1970-1974, he was sheriff of See 10, Page 3 mammmm mammma