SECRET SERVICE See Editorial Page Y 4f[tr4AOFgaYi A6V Ap 743 a t I# WINDSWEPT High - 60 Low - 48 See Today for detals Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 19 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 25, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages h - - f . 4 ltAUSEE wS i MLP C LZ'D.Y Hooky and God Kids who hate school may be getting their signals from that great professor in the sky-GOD. Roger Peterson is in jail for refusing to send his seven- year-old son to school. The Wisconsin man says, "God has told us not to send our children to school. He wants to teach them himself." Peterson has some ideas on education that may hit home. He said his son would "learn only fairy tales and ponsense in school. You either believe or you don't, and we believe." Happenings . .. start off with a jump today. The University Skydivers offer their first jump course-no experi- ence necessary-at 7 p.m. in 1042 E. Engin Bldg. .the local Wounded Knee support group holds an organizational meeting at 7:30 in the Michigan Union, 3L . . . also at 7:30 SGC meets at 3909 Michigan Union ... a Portuguese revolu- tionary speaks at the Central Methodist Church . . . at 7:30 PIRGIM will hold a board meeting at 4106 Michigan Union . . . and at 8 p.m. the city Democrats will hold their September meeting at the public library where Mayor Wheeler will be ! answering questions about CDRS. The public is invited. Presidential protection If Al Capone were alive and elected president, he'd get the same Secret Service protection as Jerry Ford, said a presidential friend and aide yesterday. "The agents are all pro. It's their duty to protect the president, and hell, they'd do that even if the people elected an Al Capone for presi- dent. But for this president they'd walk across live coals," he said. Who did it? A muskrat turned the lights off for 1,385 cus- tomers of the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. in California for more than an hour Monday night. And workmen think an owl put him up to it. The muskrat's body was found stretched across three circuits ten feet off the ground. Muskrats don't climb, so how did it get up there? A PG&E public information officer said the workmen have often seen owls sitting atop the substation devouring rats, mice, muskrats, or other prey. "I guess you might say who's the culprit?" he joked. A hairless affair It cost a married Tokyo woman the hair on her head to have an affair with another man. A court convicted Seichiro Kikuchi, 29, yesterday of hack- ing off part of his wife's hair with a samurai sword and then forcing her to shave off the rest. Kikuchi was placed on four years probation. He was the second man in Japan tried for forcing his wife to shave her head. In the other case the court said, "Hair is not only a social necessity for a woman. It is a large part of her life." On the inside .. . A NOW spokeswoman writes about women and sports on the Edit Page . . . Arts Page features a preview of the Chick Corea concert by James Fiebig . .. and Sports editor Brian Deming writes about Michigan placekicker Bob Wood. On the outside... Hurricane Eloise decided to postpone her visit for a while. The ghost of Eloise will continue to move slowly northward giving us mostly cloudy and windy weather with showers developing and cooler temperatures. High-55 to 60. As Eloise continues to move slowly north, showers will turn into a steady rain tonight. Lows-48 to 53. Friday will be mostly cloudy with showers in the morning followed by decreasing cloudiness during the af- ternoon due to Eloise leaving us. At night the skies will become clearing and cooler. Highs-55 to 60. Lows-38 to 43. Feds bust By JIM TOBIN Federal narcotic agents yesterday arrested twenty persons and expected to round up at least thirty more in an effort to crack a major city- based drug ring. Thirty agents of the Drug Enforcement Admin- istration (DEA), working with state and local police were involved in an intensive four-month investigation of the operation. None of those arrested were believed to be University students. DEA OFFICIALS called it one of the most significant narcotics raids ever in the Michigan- Ohio area, and described the ring as "a drug supply center for seven states, with sources in Mexico, Jamaica, and Canada." When asked how the bust would affect Ann Arbor narcotics traffic, city Police Chief Walter Krasny declared, "I think it's going to make a pretty good dent in it for awhile." Wheeli 21 The inve was conduc "IT WAS said Krasn team of m don't want pretty toug junkie." By yeste pounds of pounds of juana, and During ti undercover pounds of six pounds dine, 4,000 t ..f locally-based dope ring " have direct access to sources of cocaine and arkes e * S SO marijuana in Mexico. He was arrested at the Broadway address with 90 pounds of hashish and an electric gun which paralyzes victims with stigation, which began in early June, of "speed" from the suspects. wired electric darts. :ted in strict secrecy. OFFICIALS estimated the wholesale value of Weills was arrested with Pena. The Weills done strictly on a top level plane," the seized drugs to be $250,000. They said they sisters were arrested in Aspen, Colorado. y yesterday evening. "You've got a could not even guess at the street value. nen out there who you sure as hell A DEA official termed most of those arrested ACCORDING to police reports, the Weills sis- t to get hurt. You're dealing with "mid-echelon distributors," though he said at ters were used as couriers or "mules" who would ;h customers, not just your average least one suspect was a major catch. travel to Texas to pick up cocaine and marijuana All those apprehended will-be charged in De- from Pena's contacts. rday afternoon agents had seized 90 troit Federal Court with sale and possession, According to police, "On these trips the Weills hashish, two and three quarters with intent to sell, of controlled substances, both sisters would, on occasion, be accompanied by phencyclidine, two pounds of mari- federal offenses. They face a maximum penalty their brother and Pena. On several occasions, two grams of cocaine. of 15 years in prison and a $25,000 fine. Weills and Pena drove back to Ann Arbor with he summer-long investigation special MAJOR figures in the ring were John Pena, multi-hundred pound quantities of marijuana." agents purchased approximately six 31, Randy Weills, 23, and his sisters Beth WeilIs, Their Broadway home, secluded aniong trees cocaine, 10 ounces of brown heroin, 19, and Debbie Weills, 23. All four lived at 1666 and underbrush behind another house which of hashish, nine ounces of phencycli- Broadway in Ann Arbor. faces onto Broadway, is a dingy single-story tablets of barbituates, and four ounces Pena is an unemployed Mexican believed to See FEDS, Page 10 vetoesCRS pla GOP may initiate mayoral recall drive *1 AP Photo Horseless Buggy David Hunter pushes Tom Hobbs on ride past antique car painted on garage door. The two 13-year-olds from Ft. Wayne, Ind., built the car, "Woodpile," in five days with discarded wagon wheels, and scrap wood from a house under construction. THREE RADICALS STILL WANTED: By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Mayor Albert . Wheeler issued an itemized veto of a City Council approved revenue sharing plan yes- terday morning - insti- gating political fireworks which eventually may lead to a Republican - engineer- ed recall campaign against the Democratic Mayor. Wheeler's line item veto halts expenditure of all but $341,309 of the $2.4 million in Community De- velopment Revenue Shar- ing (CDRS) funds from the federal government. The money not blocked by Wheeler's move will be issued to 20 city programs which the Mayor believes require emer- gency funding. WHEELER also announced yesterday that he will be ap- pointing a new CDRS citizens committee to aid council in re- vamping plans for spending the remaining $2.1 million by late October. The CDRS resolution vetoed by Wheeler was the product of a Republican-Human Rights Party (HRP) coalition which drafted a compromise plan and passed it with a 6-5 vote during an emergency council session last Friday. The plan, which called for is- suing all of the federal funds im- mediately, was largely identical to the final recommendations made by a Citizens Advisory Committee for CDRS inFebru- ary. Council Democrats, how- ever, opposed the plan for its "piecemeal" o u t l i n e, and claimed that it violated certain pre-requisites established by the Department of Housing and Ur- ban Development (HUD). WHEELER'S use of his veto power - a rare action - will undoubtedly spark Republican and HRP retaliation. It is vir- tually impossible however, for Council to muster the eight votes necessary to override the veto. With Council Democrats, supporting the Mayor's move, the single HRP, and five Repub- lican council members would, fall two votes short- of success- fully transcending the veto. The Republicans, who threat- ened Wheeler with a recall last See MAYOR, Page 7 Wheeler Doe tors By AY' and Reuter to study Hearst SAN FRANCISCO - A federal judge yesterday appointed a panel of four psychiatrists and one psychologist to determine if kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst is sane enough to stand trial. Hearst's lawyers, in an affidavit signed by her, claimed yes- terday she had been brainwashed by her Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) captors and coerced into joining them as an under- ground guerrilla. Meanwhile, three fugitives who figure in the Patricia Hearst probe are wanted by federal officials for questioning in connec- tion with a brutal bank robbery-murder, it was learned yes- terday. A source close to the probe said James Kilgore and Kathy and Josephine Soliah are being sought in connection with an April 21 holdup of a branch of Crocker Bank in the Sacramento suburb of Carmichael. Walt Weiner, assistant agent in charge of the Sacramento FBI office, said during the $15,000 robbery, Myrna Ophasl-a mother of four children-was slain by a shotgun blast "for no reason." IN ADDITION, Weiner said the four robbers-their faces hid- den by ski masks-went behind the counter and stomped on the heads of persons they had ordered to the floor. Police also said they believe a fifth person waited outside the bank in a second getaway car. In a related development, CBS television reported last night that marked cash from the bank robbery was found in an apart- ment occupied by Patricia Hearst and a radical comrade. U. S. Atty. James Browning, asked about the report, said he could neither confirm nor deny it. Authorities say the apartment was rented by Steven Soliah, 27, indicted yesterday on a charge of harboring a fugitive. Soliah's fingerprints have linked him to a getaway car used in the rob- See COURT, Page 2 CIA e opened mal of officials By AP and UPI WASHINGTON - A Senate committee said yesterday the CIA for nearly 20 years opened and read the mail of well known groups and individuals including Richard Nixon, Martin Luther King Jr., and one letter from the committee chairman to his mother-in-law. Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said evidence so far showed that Nixon was not aware of the practice when he was in the White House. "THE PRESIDENT did not know that the mail was being opened," Church said. Church disclosed that in June 1968 the agency opened and read a letter, which commented on Nixon's prospects in that year's presidential election, written by Nixon speechwriter Raymond Price while traveling in the So- viet Union. An aide subsequently ques- tioned by reporters said at first that Nixon mail had been opened both before and during See CIA, Page 7 Sexy stuff Has contraception put a snag in your sex life? Are you wor- Expelled med student may sue U' for $5 million A former medical student contesting his 1973 explusion is threatening to sock the University with a $5 million law suit. A decision by the medical school's execu- tive committee., expected this afternoon, on whether to readmit 28-year-old Charles Stone will heavily influence the decision to pursue the suit. BARRY MOON, Stone's attorney, said the committee's rejection of the request for re- admission will result in litigation of the IN MAY 1972 Stone was asked to take ar leave of absence from the medical school- 11 days before he was to graduate. He was readmitted in June 1973 but sub- sequently expelled the following October. He has been fighting the decision ever since. University officials have refused to com- ment on either why Stone was originally asked to leave in 1972 or why he was ex-{ Moore led dual life: FI in former and radical activist By AP and Reuter SAN FRANCISCO-Twenty-four hours before she allegedly fired a gun at President Ford, Sara Jane Moore was continuing in her role as a government informer. Moore was doing two things at the same time- hinting to police of plans to kill President Ford later Sunday night. A gun collector revealed yesterday that he sold Moore a second-hand gun for $125 only three and a half hours before she was alleged to have fired at President Ford. THE SALE was legal-a collector does not have