Friday, August 17, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five Friday, August 17, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five State rep busted for heroin use LANSING (UPI) - State Rep. Dale Warner, onetime chairman of a House study committee on drugs and alcohol, was arrested at a downtown area motel Wed- nesday on charges of possessin and use of heroin. A woman companion N a n c y Witherspoon, whose husband Samo is serving a prison term on a narcotics conviction, also was ar- rested and charged with heroin possession. A third unidentified man was also picked up, but no charges were filed against him and he was released. OFFICERS MAKING the arrest caught Warner throwing a sy- ringe into a toilet, said Ingham County Prosecutor, R a y m o n d Scodeler. They also found three open tin foil packets containing a powdery substance in Warner's pockets, Scodeller said. Scodeller said the officers did not have a search warrant. All of the items confiscated were turned over to the State Police crime lab for analysis. In addition, Warner was submit- ted to a blood test. THE 32-YEAR-OLD, seven-year lawmaker showed up for his ar- raignment unshaven and wearing cutoffs and a long-sleeve shirt with the sleeves rolled up. Chew- ing nervously on a finger, the Eaton Rapids Republican smiled and sometimes giggled at report- ers' questions, withholding c o m- ment on most of them saying, "It's a judicial matter." However, spotting one reporter he recognized, he asked, "isn't this interesting?" Warner, stood mute to the charges at his arraignment be- fore District Court Judge James Giddings. Innocent pleas were entered in hissbehalf and he was released on surety bonds total- ing $3,500 pending a preliminary hearing. CONVICTION ON the posses- sion charge, a felony, carries a maximum sentence of four years. The charge of heroin use, a misdemeanor, carries a one- year sentence upon conviction. Convictions also would result in his disbarment as an attorney. Warner has no prior arrest re- cord. Scodeller said Warner told ar- resting officers he had arranged to meet Witherspoon so that he could take her to visit her hus- band at Southern Michigan Pri- son in Jackson. THE ARRESTS, by two plain- clothes members of the Ingham County metro squad and two un- iformed Lansing policemen, fol- lowed a tip that a heroin sale was to take place at the Lansing Six Motel, Scodeller said. "One of the officers observed him entering that room, but didn't even know it was him," the prosecutor said. Warner, who six years ago served as chairman of the spe- cial house study committee, was asked for his general views on narcotics. "I DON'T THINK I should say anything on that," he replied. When advised by his attorney, David Lick,sto refrain from answering such questions from newsmen, Warner complained, "They're all my friends, I know them all." air AMEM. AP Photo STATE REP. DALE WARNER (R-Eaton Rapids) rubs his hands as he is confronted by reporters Wednesday as he was led to district court in Lansing on a charge of possession and use of heroin. Th isis Newsprint. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 D(4 4 4 Harmless looking, isn't it? All by itself, this innocuous square of paper hardly seems important. But every week about 170,000 pounds of newsprint comes into Ann Arbor as news- papers or to be made into newspapers. Well-packed, that would make a square pile 20 feet on a side and 10 feet tall, solid newsprint. After the news is read, the paper is buried and both are forgotten. But the pile of old newsprint will grow until it no longer can be ignored. Fortunately, there is a solution. Old newsprint can be recycled and made into paper products, thus sparing the landscape and trees that would other- wise have been cut. In Ann Arbor the Ecology Center has a recycling station on South Industrial Highway, off Stadium, just south of the Coca-Cola bottlers. It's open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednes- day thru Saturday. Advertising contributed by The Michigan Daily