Nin Edi iety-One Years of rtrial Freedom j:1; E LIEt iEtai1 DETERIORATING Partly cloudy and cold today with a high in the teens. Low tonight -31. Vol. XCI, No. 86 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan, Saturday, January 10, 1981 Ten Cents Eight Pages Stolen U' books turn up at local sho Police issue warrant for suspect 0 By BARRY WITT Ann Arbor police have issued a warrant for the arrest of a suspect in the theft of at least 10 rare books from University libraries, some of which were discovered on the shelves of the State Street Bookshop. Police have not released the suspect's name, pending his arrest. Detective Dan Branson said he has agreed to allow the suspect to surrender himself in the presence of an attor- ney sometime next week. THE CASE began to unfold December 18 when Peter Tolson, a graduate student in the Biological Sciences depar- tment, noticed a rare book on herpetology on display at the State Street Bookshop. Tolson, who was familiar with the *book from his studies, informed faculty members of the Zoology department, who identified the book as being owned by the department. After the book was determined to be missing from a divisional library in the Natural Science Museum, campus security and the police were informed. The suspect "claimed he bought the books from somebody in the museum building," according to Zoology Prof. Arnold Kluge, curator of herpetology in the Museum of Zoology library. PROF. RONALD Nussbaum, assistant curator of the division, confirmed Kluge's report, adding that the suspect cited a George Williams as the original seller. However, Nussbaum said the only George Williams he knew in the department was a "distinguished visiting scholar, who didn't fit the description (the suspect gave of the alleged seller) ." Branson said the suspect "surrendered" the remainder of the books to police. "Some, or maybe all, were in that (State Street) bookstore. Some he may have had himself," Branson said. He said that the suspect must have retrieved the books himself, possibly from other local bookstores. An eleventh book tied to the suspect may have already been resold at a Boston book sale, according to Nussbaum. A University professor said the recovered books might be just the 'tip of an iceberg,' implying the suspect could have stolen and sold an untold number of books. Branson said that he was told of the book by the suspect, but said he has not been able to track it down. In such a case "the bookshop must have acted as an agent," Branson said. State Street Bookshop owner Kevin Sheets said yesterday that there were no marks identifying the books as being owned by the University, but he declined to comment on other aspects of the case. See 'U', Page 5 Ann Arbor, TY station will debut By JANET RAE It may not be Hollywood, but Monday morning Ann Arbor finally will have its own local television station when WRHT-TV beams its first signal over Channel 31. The infant station, based in Chelsea, will provide the area with local commercial broad- casting and also will offer non-cable subscription television programming. CHANNEL , 31. will broadcast commercially from approximately 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily before switching over to a scrambled signal for sub- *scribers, Commercial scheduling will include old movies, "how-to" series, specials, and a local talk show four days a week that will feature local public affairs. Subscription service, which includes a "matinee" movie from 1 to 3 p.m., and films and other specials at night, is scheduled to begin Feb. 1. It will cost $22.95 a month. After "prime time" the price is $3.95 for "adult" films. "It's an ideal place," said Dick Smith, executive vice president of the Oklahoma-based Satellite Syndicated Systems, the new station's owner. "WE THINK IT (Channel 31) will be good for us and good for the community," Smith said, The Federal Communications Commission granted the station a license in 1973 to Ann Arbor resident Gershom Morningstar. Lack of finan- cing prevented the company, Wolverine Mor- ningstar, from following through on plans to con- struct a station, Morningstar said. He said he sold the station's license to SSS last January. WRHT IS THE first broadcasting affiliate with the previously all-cable subsidiary of SSS, Syn- dicated Programs Network. Because of this, the station will have access to a variety of programs circulating within the satellite system. Horowitz said he expects that the present common management partnership between the subscription interests and the commercial side will prove to meet a greater variety of local needs. For instance, "Local advertisers want local coverage," he said. 0 Ann Arbor has had only one other station, WPAG-TV, which went dark in 1958 because of a weak broadcasting system. THE FIRST Channel 31 transmission will be a series called "That's Academic" which will feature a University-produced show, "Future See NEW, Page 2 Daily Phofo by DAVID HARRIS RARE BOOKS FROM the University libraries have been found for sale in the State Street Bookshop. Un-employment, prices climb. WASHINGTON (AP)-Prices at the wholesale level climbed 11.7 percent in 1980, as the year ended with 1.5 million more Americans out of work than at the end of 1979, the gover- nment reported yesterday. The rise in wholesale prices for 1980 was down only slightly from a 12.6 percent jump in 1979, while the num- ber of unemployed people. was- up sharply from 6.3 million at the end of 1979 to 7.8 million in December, the Labor Department said. MOREOVER, 1981 begins with energy prices advancing at a double- digit annual rate after months of moderation as a result of new in- creases in fuel prices announced by major oil companies. In the last inflation and jobless reports issued before President Car- ter leaves office, the government said wholesale prices increased a relatively modest 0.6 percent in December, the same as in November, while the unemployment rate declined from 7.5 percent in Novem- ber to 7.4 percent in December. The wholesale price increase for 1980 compares with a 3.3 percent rise in 1976, the year before Carter moved into the White House. The latest unemployment rate was nearly iden- tical to the 7.5 percent rate that con- fronted Carter upon taking office in January 1977. IF THE RISE in wholesale price's continued at December's 0.6 percent monthly increase for a full year the annual inflation rate would be 7.8 per- cent. However, economists caution that coming months will bring renewed price pressures on food and energy. Although the December wholesale price and unemployment reports suggest a very modest improvement in the economy as President-elect Ronald Reagan prepares to enter the White House, most economists expect high inflation and unemployment to persist during the Republican's first year in office. Unemployment, Percent of Work Force 8.5 -- Dc Seasona Ly 8.0 Adjusted I1:4% 1.0 6.5 6.0 JFMAMJJASOND 1980. Source:.Dept of Labor 1P Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS STUDENTS TRUDGE ALONG on their way to classes across a snow, slush, and ice-covered Diag yesterday. University Plant Operations personnel said they would have the frozen mess cleared off the center of campus sometime today. Slippery sid ewlbalks shall be shovelled By JEFF VOIGT If you have been one of the many students slipping and sliding to and from class during the past few days, take heart. The central campus area should be cleared by this morning, according to University Plant Operations General Foreman Bob Hanselmann. "We have been doing most of our work in the medical center," he ex- plained, adding that crews would work last night and during the day cleaning up the area surrounding the Diag. GROUNDS MANAGER Doug Sasing said that his department has experienced difficulties in removing the large amount of snow that has fallen in the area recently. Sasing said much of it collected during the recent winter break while snow removal personnel weren't working. "Budget cuts have caused problems with our overtime," he added. Sasing also said that equipment problems have slowed the clean-up effort. Extensive use of the equip- ment in sub-zero temperatures, he explained, have caused a number of breakdowns. THE SIDEWALKS are sanded and salted to break up the snow so that sweepers can come through later and remove it, Hanselmann said. "But with these severe tem- peratures, very little has taken place," he added. "If we could get one day of temperatures in the upper 20s or lower 30s it would be much easier." Hanselmann said the plant operations department tries to get at the snow as quickly as possible, but that it was still trying to catch up with the snow that fell during the vacation. He also said additional snow that fell during recent days has added to the problem. cl 'r ekigaims, bi'as hurt sex lf BOSTON (AP)-A federal magistrate has urged a The Osinubis, who were born in Nigeria, tried without judge to award $141,000 to a black couple who claimed success in 1974 to see an apartment at the Brentwood that their sex life was disrupted for five years and that Manor complex in Arlington, a Boston suburb. At the they suffered mental damage after a rental agent time, Osinubi was an engineer at Polaroid and a refused to show them an apartment. graduate student at Massachusetts Institute of Magistrate Peter Princi ruled that Kunle and Kofo Technology. Osinubi, both in their 20s, suffered "severe and extreme TrlE MAGISTRATE FOUNI that the rental agent, emotional damage" because they were discriminated Irene Magill, said several times that she was too busy to against while apartment hunting six years ago.,to t THE MAGISTRATE SAID both husband and wife suf- show them an apartment. But at the same time, white fered a "loss of sexual drive" and did not have sex for friends of the couple were able to view apartments three years after the incident. Sexual relations resumed, without difficulty. dmh but "she hated it," the magistrate reported. Normal After the couple filed a legal complaint, the agent relations did not resume until mid-1979. showed them an apartment, Princi said, but she over "During these five years," he said, "she felt that stated the rent and falsely said only one parking space because she was black, she was not good enough to be was available. loved by her husband." COUPLE, Page 2 TODAY Pennies from heaven MANY ANN ARBOR residents would pray for such luck, but at least one Fort Lauderdale, Fla. resident was less than pleased with a recent windfall. It seems a low-flyingI smuggler-apparently trying to evade U.S. Customs agen- ts pursuing him in a plan-"bombed" a Fort Lauderdale neighborhood with 100-pound bales of marijuana yesterday morning. Although no one was injured, one of the bales scored a direct hit on a mobile home, ripped through thea economy, according to Domino Director of Marketing Communications Bob Salogar. "We would get a tremen- dous savings on fuel, and since there are no moving parts in the car motor, it would last between six and eight years," he said. The car has already been tested in Lansing and, according to Salogar, the car will be in Ann Arbor sometime after Jan. 15. Voter registra ion deadline January 19 is the deadline for registering to vote in the city primary election scheduled for February 16. Persons who wish to register should report to the City Clerk's office, on the second floor of City Hall, which is at the corner of Fif- th and Huron streets. The office is open from 8 a.m. to 5 phone has been ringing off the hook. Nitrous oxide is better' known as laughing gas, and Dr. Mohamed Ghoneim, an anesthesiologist and a College of Medicine professor, said the overwhelming response seems related to a common view that the gas provides the inhaler a pleasant euphoria. Ghoneim has been flooded with calls from persons willing to be among the 40 volunteers paid $25 to inhale a mild con- centration of nitrous oxide. The experimenters are testing the drug's effect on memory. "Probably the highest abusers are dentists, health professionals, medical studen- ts, and others who have access to tanks of nitrous oxide in hospitals," Ghoneim said. "You also have those people who sniff the gases from whipped cream cans, which contain nitrnim nv, ido Pnnlc, on1 th,, ,vIinelnrv WA, 'c tffivult toi " n a ,,,