The Michigan Daily Vol LXXXVII, No. 37-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, July 6, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Carter prepares gas rationing plan WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter is prepar- ing a standby gasoline ration- ing proposal to cut fuel use as much as 25 per cent in case of an emergency, administration officials said yesterday. Carter met with energy ad- viser James Schlesinger yester- day and decided to go ahead with a rationing proposal to Congress so there would be no damaging delay should an emergency occur, officials said. T.HE PRESIDENT has authority now to propose a rationing system, but it could not take effect until Congress approved. Last week, it was learned that Carter could impose gaso- line rationing immediately in event of another oil embargo or a similar emergency. The ra- tioning program would make use of coupons printed during the 1973-1974 embargo but nev- er distributed. Rationing would be one of several tough emergency meas- ures the President could adopt under the new plan, officials said, including: . Restrictions on heating, cooling, lighting and heating of water. * Commuter parking restric- tions and carpooling incentives. . Restrictions on weekend distribution of gasoline and Diesel fuel. " Requirements for boiler cofnbustion efficiency. * Restrictions on illuminated advertising and outdoor gas lighting. Officials said Carter has been assessing for some time a pro- posal for standby rationing ,and believes it is feasible to have the authority now to impose such a system. The subject became more Im- portant as budget proposals for 1979 were explored, officials said. Carter told Schlesinger to go ahead with plans but set no timetable for submission to See CARTER, Page 10 case 1975, and Sallade feels that all four were caused by Pavubon in- jections. Leanora Perez is charged with causing Blaine's breathing fail- ure of August 15, the only one of the four mentioned in the indict- ment against the nurses. See VA, Page 10 And a one and a two ... Big Bird, star of television's long-running children's series "Sesame Street," has a word with Sidney Harth, concert master of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Monday while rehearsing for a performance in the Hollywood Bowl. Jur still undecided in VA By KEITH B. RICHBURG Special To The Daily DETROIT - After 41 hours spread over seven days, the jury has still not reached a ver- dict in Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital poisoning trial of two Filipino nurses. The three men and nine wo- men jurors have been deliberat- ing the fate of Filipina Narciso, 31, of Ypsilanti Township, and Learora Perez, 33, of Ann Ar- bor, since 3:05 p.m. last Wednes- day. THE LENGTH of the deliber- ation has surprised almost ev- eryone, including the federal prosecutor who had made a pre- diction of a verdict within three or four days. Prosecutor Richard Yanko, the U.S. Attorney at the trial, said that although he wastsur- prised by the length of the de- liberation he doesn't find it "un- usual". Tanko pointed out that the jurors have to consider ten separate charges against the de- fendants - t h r e e poisonings against Perez, four poisonings and a murder against Narciso, and a count of conspiracy against both women-and the jury could be taking three or four hours to consider each count. "To say that they've been out an abnormally long period of time, I wouldn't say that," Yan- ko remarked. THE DEFENDANTS h a v e gone into seclusion- in a down- town hotel to await the verdict. Reports filtered in yesterday that the nurses were not wor- ried about their pending fate. Narciso went jogging in the n*rning, and the defense law- yers were seen swimming in the hotel pool, sources said. Narciso and Perez are accus- ed of causing a rash of breath- ing failures at the Ann Arbor VA hospital in the summer of 1975. The government contends that the women caused the breathing failures by injecting the patients with Pavulon, a powerful muscle relaxing drug used often during Sallade (pronounced Soliday) is surgery. representing Cora Lee Blaine, While the jury is pondering the widow' of former VA patient guilt or innocence of Narciso Bennie Blaine, in a suit against and Perez, the hospital itself is the U.S. Veterans Administra- facing several court suits on be- tion asking for compensations half of the relatives of some of totaling $2.25 million. the poisoning victims. Blaine. stopped breathing four ANN ARBOR lawyer George times during July and August of Israel, Egypt agree to new peace talks JERUSALEM tAj - The leaders of Israel and radio as saying he would be willing to return Egypt have agreed in principle to reconvene, to Geneva even before then. possibly by October, the Arab-Israeli peace talks Sen. Jacob Javits, on a tour of the Middle in Geneva suspended four years ago after one East, cautioned that groundwork for a peace brief session. conference must be well prepared, and said much Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli depends on the outcome of Begin's meeting with Prime Minister Menaham Begin welcomed each President Carter in Washington July 19. other's offers to resume the talks in statements The New York Republican, one of Israel's Monday and yesterday. staunchest congressional supporters, told a news conference the Carter-Begin meeting "is capa- THE EARLIEST we can be ready is the -tenth ble of being decisive." But he urged that Begin of October," Begin told Israeli state radio, say- take up hard issues of the Mideast conflict and ing he wanted to wait until after the Jewish not just procedural matters. High Holiday season. Sadat was quoted in Cairo See ISRAEL, Page 10