Join The Daily! Mass Meeting Sept. 19- 7:30 STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUlLDING-420 Maynard Street FOOTBALL TICKETSMEDIOCRE See Editorial Page See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 7 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 15, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages U.S. attorneys say Lance probe was halted in 6 W ASHINGTON (AP)-Justice De- partment attorneys who investigated -one of Bert Lance's banks said yesterday their investigation was going full speed when the Atlanta U.S. attorney ordered it dropped a month after Jimmy Carter was ,:elected President. However, the former U.S. attor- ney, John Stokes, denied that the Investigation was fruitful and said he 'closed it for lack of a prosecutable case. HE ENDED the investigation last #Dec. 2, a day before Carter an- nounced that Lance would be budget director. The allegations came on a day wh'en Lance was criticizing the news media for its coverage of his prob- lems and denying he would resign. White House Press Secretary Jody Powell also was apologizing for spreading rumors about one of Lance's most outspoken critics, Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.). Stokes' form- er assistants contended Stokes didn't want to anger the incoming adminis- tration and lose his job before he was eligible for a pension. Regents kickoff term :with easy schedule By BRIAN BLANCHARD Like hundreds of classes meeting for the first time this week, the Regents ease into the new academic year with a light schedule today, tidying up and okaying such projects as the St. Joseph's Hospital purchase, an allied health program, and the Office of Af- firmative Action. St. Joseph's, which sits on the corner of Catherine and Ingalls Streets, was deserted by doctors and nurses last spring in favor of a new St. Joseph's on Huron Parkway. THE REGENTS have already sunk $101,000 into the property and have agreed to buy it for $6 million more if the state legislature supports-the plan., University officials haven't an- nounced a specific use for St. Joseph's but the building sits within a stone's throw of the University Hospital and the funds for the payment will come from a sum reserved for "University hospital replacement projects," accor- ding to James Brinkerhoff, vice presi- dent for financial affairs. The Regents are also expected to ap- prove a new office to handle allied health programs - those areas in the health field outside the professional schools of medicine, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy, and public health - in the University Hospital and the Medical School. IT'S UNCLEAR just how students would be affected by the reorganization which would shift funds from the Medical School's existing Office of Al- lied Health Education to the new, as yet unnamed office. In the September meeting, held today and tomorrow in the Regent's Room of the Administration building starting at 1:30 today, the eight elected officials are expected to formally approve the Office of Affirmative Action by incor- porating it in the University bylaws. The Office has been in operation for some time, promoting equal oppor- tunity for students, faculty, and staff. Stokes acknowledgedin testimony before the Senate Governmental Af- fairs Committee that he didn't want to be "a lame duck Republican D.A. trying to make a name for himself." Furthermore, if his office continued the investigation, he said, it would "certainly leak out. You have no right to destroy a man's public ca- reer by fiddlirig around with an in- vestigation for a few months when you don't have the grounds to start with," Stokes said. OFFICIALS of the comptroller of the currency's office earlier testified that they did not believe the Justice Department would have prosecuted the case because it would be hard to sell to a jury. The department was trying to decide if overdrafts by Lance's 1974 gubernatorial campaign committee on the Calhoun First National Bank were really illegal campaign contri- butions. Jeffrey Bogart, former assistant U.S. attorney, told the Senate hear- ing, "it's inconceivable to me that the case was closed" at that time. HE SAID he met with Stokes Nov. 29, 1976, asking him to pursue the campaign finance case and over- drafts by Lance family members at the Calhoun Bank. "I remember he did not want to rock the boat and I believe he made some reference to his pension," Bogart said. However, Stokes testified Bogart told him in September "the case is no good. I'm going to close the file." He said he was surprised when Bogart told him Nov. 29 he-wanted to pursue the case. Stokes said he decided before closing the investigation that it was not prosecutable. He said former Assistant Atty. Gen. Richard Thorn- burgh agreed with him in a telephone conversation. i -'.. . C DiyP tobCHStiNAyCNEfE D.yly^hoto y CHRU S NA xSCHNElDE . . . o r bx .a ck qh e reoI? ~o UGLY 4O EATIUL By SHELLYWOLSN Bereheur g s f er fiv paa$ 5ogamsof or-en tee eah o whch s bFt.e eclam.n "'s o :neof h motRsgnyi. nteddtons l vp ossible w ay.andsis a s1x3-fn -th e -ar m to th e ar, s oo' ". Gve sen,"snrte sohomre ric k SroM. At irs Ifh" ghsigingY "Ijt hopekh''"dentswill a 'tto , 0-O 0 \N .fi .. . . . r £ .W 2si r.z. . r ..- . .wptp rksgg rg "r ', lr s ..,X. Ceatsvtatm.t N g. w Ss4servicerride o .,.n'U' decisii ...o....lak thereo. UGLY....0BEAUTIFUL: r't orm campsout at the U By SHELLEY WOLSO Beoe h crou .zsof passersby and no o-e a n dful*o f edesan oresusda rneOaNdr bron-bggrs,"Dadaus, a prwlig pec/ofco - and othe tool osti pdrn i-orm rto temprarysculture wasassebledyestrdayat is ne sesio. TO OM OLOKESthugh te eoeticdeig Se A DAiLySPagey2HRSTNASCNEDE ArtnformecampsooutNaththewl'U temorrysltrwsasedytererdayat ewsesson U d cso Narciso, Perez sentencing today, face possible life imprisonment By KEITH RICHBURG Nurses Filipina Narciso and Leonora Perez, convicted of the 1975 Veterans Administration Hospital poisonings, will be sentenced today by Federal Dis- trict Judge Philip Pratt. The sentencing in Detroit was also expected to be accompanied by a pro- test from - supporters of the women, claiming the women are innocent of three counts of poisoning each and one count of conspiracy each. THE FILIPINO WOMEN both face life imprisonment. "We don't know what to expect," de- fense attorney Thomas O'Brien said yesterday. "The only thing that really happens publicly is the formal an- nouncement by the judge." Kids who ate PBB tested for defects From AP and UPI LANSING (AP) - Michigan health officials were to begin testing yester- day hundreds of children born on chemically contaminated farms to find out if they have suffered birth defects. The two days of tests at the Muskegon County Health Depart- ment and Muskegon General Hospi- tal are the latest in a series of investigations stemming from the Sentencing is scheduled for 2 p.m. to- day, but shortly beforehand, O'Brien and the three co-counsels representing the nurses will enter the judge's cham- bers and learn the verdict privately. "ALL WE CAN DO is hope for the best," O'Brien said. "Because of our belief in their innocence, any sentence is unfair." The defense lawyers plan to file two motions on Monday, one for an acquit- tal of the nurses and another requesting a directed verdict of acquittal. Pratthas scheduled Oct. 11 for argu- ments on the two defense motions. "IF EITHER OF THOSE motions'are denied, there's our basis for appeal," O'Brien said. Pratt, who presided over the 10-week- long trial,'is expected to take into ac- count a report he received from the United States probation department earlier this month, which contains in- terviews with both women, according to O'Brien. See NARCISO, Page 10 By DAVID GOODMAN University officials are expected to decide next week whether to rein- state the "Night Owl" bus service created last fall after a series of at- tacks on women near campus, ac- cording to Fred Davids, Security Chief. Without fanfare, the University discontinued the "Night Owl" pro- gram at the end of April because of declining ridership and the end of the school term, said Joel Berger, Uni- versity information director. "THERE WAS a great flurry of use at first and then it just dwindled down to nothing," Berger said. During October and November of last year, some 16 women were at- tacked, often at knife point in the At least two of them were raped. Ann Arbor police said they suspected one man carried out all 10 assaults. On January 12, Mississippi authori- ties arrested 26-year-old Robert Finklea in connection with one of the attacks. He was later convicted with one of the attacks. He was later convicted of unarmed robbery, but was never charged with any of the other attacks. THE "NIGHT OWL" service was inaugurated November 20, 1976. Buses left 'the Undergraduate Li brary every half hour from 7 p.m. to1 a.m'., seven days a week. The buses had regular stops on Hill Street, Ox- ford Housing, the hill dormitories, University Hospital and Geddes Bus Shelter. "There's no decision we're not go- ing to have a "Night Owl" service," Davids said. "It's been discussed and there's been no decision pro or con. Davids said October 15 would be a likely starting date for the bus See REINSTATEMENT, Pa e 7 Narciso and Perez in happier days PRIMARY LOSERS THROW SUPPORT TO BROWNE: Brown e, Young to court black vote I