The Michigan Daily Vol LXXXVi I, No. 11-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, May 18, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Rapist's confession called rumor' By EILEEN DALEY Ann Arbor police are denying reports that a man arrested Monday morning has admitted to commit- ting at least three of the rapes which occurred during the rash of attacks last fall. WJBK-TV News reported last night that Gerald Walker confessed to committing three of the rapes after he was arrested and charged with raping a uni- versity student and intent to commit larceny. Dept. Chief Harold Olson said that reports that Walk- er admitted committing the rapes were "not true." "We're talking to him about some other unsolved rapes," he said, "but he has totally denied those" (rapes last fall). "There is a possibility he might be involved in more rapes, there is a possibility that he is not," said Lt. Richard Hill. "There isn't anything in this point in time that leads us to that fact." Walker was apprehended at approximately 11:00 a.m. Monday when police responded to a breaking and entering call. They then discovered that the woman who lived at the residence had been raped. PROSECUTING Attorney William Delhey expressed doubt concerning Walker as a suspect in the rapes. "This one (rape) occurred in a house" he noted. "The others were on the street. There's a lot of dif- ference." Delhey said that Walker did fit a rough description of the rapist, although he added, "I stress the word rough." WJBK REPORTED the story of the -alleged con- fession from information they said they received from Capt. Robert Conn of Ann Arbor Police. When contacted yesterday, Conn called Walker's confession a rumor. "I told them (WJBK) last night it was a rumor. I got about eight phone calls after that and it seemed to keep getting more and more distorted as it gets down the line." Walker was arraigned yesterday afternoon. Meanwhile, the police's number one suspect remains Robert Finklea, who was arrested Jan. 12 on one charge of rape and unarmed robbery. THE RAPE Finklea is charged with is not one of the attacks which happened last fall. The woman he is accused of raping was closely associated with him for at least a month, and the attack occurred Jan. 2. Finklea fits the description of the rapist and Delhey said that he was still considered a suspect in the case. Although he refused to comment as to whether he believed Finklea was a suspect, Major Raymond Wood- ruff of Ann Arbor Police Detective division noted, "There have been no reported rapes of that type since his (Finklea) incarceration." Witness says Perez fiddled W' th IV tub By KEITH RICHBURG Special to The Daily DETROIT-When Veteran's Administration (VA) Hospital patient Benny Blain suffered a breathing failure in August 1975, VA nurse Leonora Perez had been "mon- keying" with his intravenous feeding tube, according to the patient's sister, Betty Jean Barnett. Barnett testified at the VA murder trial here yester- day that Perez "started maonkeying with his IV tubes that were hanging there. He had a bunch of tubes hang- ing there and she was monkeying with them." BENNY BLAIN, who had been admitted to the VA in July 1975 for abdominal pains suffered a breathing failure just minutes after Perez was allegedly in his room. Barnett testified that Perez "kept asking her to leave," and she had gotten no farther than a j " waiting room down the hall when a "Code 7"-or medical emer- gency-was called for Blain. Blain survived the breathing failure, but died in the hospital 12 days later of complications. Perez is accus ed of injecting Pav- ulon, a muscle relaxing drug, into Blain's intravenous feeding tube. Barnett also accused the VA hospital's afternoon shift of not taking proper care of her brother. "The day shift was perfect, and the midnight shift was," she said. Asked if she thought the afternoon shift was incompetent, Barnett answered "I know. He NSIDER used to tell us that they didn't keep him clean." ground, Vorkmen PART OF BARNETT'S testimony, made in the absence of the dmarks. jury, was not allowed on the record. During a short recess; Bar- nett told Judge Philip Pratt that her brother "used to kid" Perez, - who was the nurse in charge of him. 0 "He used to tell her that he c r s is was going to the "Philipina Is- lands on a honeymoon", Bar- nett said. She said that Perez would always ask Blain "what cities, now it has become a replica of them. do you have against us?" Now people come to Yosemite because it Barnett told Judge Pratt that is run like a city," Sax said. Perez and Blain would "get' in- WAYNE STATE University Law Prof. to little arguments," and that Zygmund Plater, a colleague of Sax's, con- Blain had nicknamed Peres tinued the discussion of the status of public "Puerto Rican." lands. "Where will it lead to?" he asked. "Why do environmentalists defend a THE JUDGE then ruled that mountain instead of a ski slope which could ersatmosphere during ohea serve so many more? ing" and would be highly pre See EXPERTS, Page 9 See WITNESS, Page 7 NO, THEY AREN'T EXACTLY beating the heat with that shower of water in the back but the "fountain" is part of the demolition of the Barbour-Waterman gymnasium. W and others yesterday gathered to view the wrecking of one of the University's oldest lan See story, page 3 Experts scuss land By LORI CARRUTHERS The Citizens' Council for Land Use Re- search and Education's (CLURE) national symposium on the status of land in the United States enters its third and final day today at Rackham. "This symposium will raise those ques- tions often ignored, to put these issues on land usage in focus for us," said Janet Lynn, CLURE spokeswoman. YESTERDAY'S morning "agenda began with a discussion of University Prof. Sax's paper entitled "Personal Preferences and Public Policy: The Dilemma of Land Man- agement in a Democratic Society." Sax's paper concerned itself with the eternal problems of public land planners not being able to please all of the people all of the time in controlling public land usage. Sax, in discussing this topic brought up Yosemite Valley and land usage there. "Yo- semite Valley used to be refuge from the