nber 21, 1977-The Michigan Daily ,awyers seek retrial, mistrial rnd acquittalfor VA nurses Ugandan prof lectures on Amin (Continued from Page 1). . hypnotized witness to make incrim- ating responses. Since the hypno- sm session had been video-taped, nd defense attorneys had seen the ipe, Yanko told the jury, "If there as anything improper," done to the itness while under hypnosis, "rest ssured that Mr. (defense lawyer' dward) Stein would have brought it ;he video-tape) into the courtroom. ATTORNEYS FOR Narciso and erez objected "to the prosecutor Yanko) implying that the defense as to prove anything in this case." Judge Pratt upheld the objection hen, cautioned Yanko, and told the iry to disregard the statement. Still he defense insists that the prosecu- r' s remarks, the last the jury heard efore b e i n g sequestered, are grounds for a mistrial. THE DEFENSE, by law, is not re- quired to produce any evidence in a criminal case, the burden of proof being on the prosecution. Judge Pratt has tentatively set October 11 as the date for both sides to argue Monday's defense motions. "If either of those motions are denied," defense lawyer Thomas O'Brien said last week, "That's our basis for appeal." Narciso and Perez were found guilty of poisoning their former patients at the Ann Arbor VA hospital during the summer of 1975. The prosecution built a circumstantial case, admittedly with "no smoking gun testimony," to prove that the women, both natives of the Philip- pines, injected Pavulon, a powerful muscle-relaxant, into the victims' intravenous medication lines. BOTH WOMEN were convicted on three counts of poisoning and one count of conspiracy. A jury of nine women and three men deliberated for some 92 hours spread over two weeks before reaching the guilty ver- dicts. Last Thursday, Judge Pratt de- ferred sentencing of Narciso and Perez, and ordered the women to report tomorrow to the federal penitentiary for women at Alderson, West Virginia "for observation and study." The two will be sentenced following their stay at Alderson, not to exceed 90 days, during which time they will be treated "just like regular prison- ers." If their motions and appeals fail, Narciso and Perez face up to three life sentences each for each of their poisoning convictions, plus five years apiece for conspiracy. (Continued from Page 1) Amin was respected because he brought "magnanimous moves of forgiveness" to Uganda, according to the Kenyan-born professor. Mazuri said that one of his first moves after reaching power was to release those put in prison by his predecessor without a trial. Also, he ordered the body of the former exiled Ugandan king back to him home soil. HIGH PRICE TAG ON KEEPING COOL TOLEDO* Ohio (AP) - Many Americans will pay more to cool their homes this summer than they did to heat them last winter, says Charles Hartman, of Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. who says "people generally don't conserve the elc- tricity used to run their air condition- ers because they don't equate it with the fuel used to heat their homes." i lectricity rates have risen 7.1 per cent in the past year Hartman 'points out, and adds, "more than half of all U.S. homeg remain uninsulated or under-insulated and are, there- fore, wasting energy." Attic insulation alone can shear surprising amounts of money off summer fuel bills, Hartman notes. "Since a home gains most of its heat through the ceiling, thus lbeeping the home more comfortable and reduc- ing the amount of air conditioning necessary." MAZURI SAID these moves were effective public relations efforts, as Amin portrayed himself as a - "lov- abld buffoon.", Mazuri said Amin achieved his power throughout the world through "symbolic embrace." Amin would make statements about more power- ful leaders that were so out of the ordinary that he himself became the subject of attention and even gained power, Mazuri explained. Mazuri acknowledged that Amin is looked upon with terror from all parts of the world. He said 50,000 to 200,000 people have died because of, Amin - either directly or indirectly.. "AMIN HAS orchestrated decen- tralized brutality, taking place at the grass roots level," Mazuri said. Mazuri presented seven scenarios about what could happen to Amin in the future, but said only two of them have a chance of coming true - either his assassination or a split within the armed forces which would lead to his collapse. But, headded, even those possibili- ties aren't highly likely because, Amin has a "sense of self-preserva- tion that is.. . highly developed," meaning he knows how to escape assassins. In the second scenario Mazuri explained that Amin has "always triumphed in power splits "and there is no reason why he won't do so in the future." In closing, Mazuri said Amin's popularity even in the third world has been "drastically reduced" because of his brutal way of running Uganda. He likened him to Satan in John Mil- ton's Paradise Lost: "Satan, choose to reign in hell rather than serve in heaven and, like Amin, deteriorated in quality." I the Powe just ri \1 right fo right fo write MOl rpoint gin for i1ng.... r class r notes home for NEY! A -2U95 JR PRICE $BASEMENT MON-SUN PAPER r f. I I I . I I I 4, 4gb Phone Numbers Circulation 764-0558 Classified Adv. 764-0557 Display Adv. 764-0554 News 764-0552 Sports 764-0562 - - ' CLiP AND SAVE .- - -.- - CLIPAND SAVE - - I I I I c s t t t i I issue, urgent, MMM9 NOW OPEN at 10:00A.M. BILLIARDS, PINBALL, & BOWLING at The UNION Resolution of Taiwan ' prof WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Tai- wan stumbling block in Peking- Washington negotiations must be overcome before the end of President Carter's tenure in office because the time for negotiations "may never be as advantageous again," University of Michigan Political Science Prof. Allen Whiting told a congressional subcommittee here yesterday. "The comforting notion that 'Pe- king will be patient and time is on our side' is subject to serious challenge," the noted China scholar cautioned the Subcommittee on Asian and Pacific Affairs of the House Committee on International Relations. Whiting, who accompanied Cyrus RE' tells House group Vance, now Secretary of State to Peking in 1975, said an agreement between the two powers does not necessarily mean "abandonment" of Taiwan. WHITING SAID China officials have "already made explicit their offer'" of the so-called "Japanese formula," allowing economic invest- ments to continue betweenTaiwan and Tokyo under non-governmental arrangements. The China expert added another note of urgency to the Taiwan question regarding American mili- tary and political. presence in Tai- wan. "The perspective from Peking may see 'peaceful liberation' at feasible over the long term, provided there is no American intervention, but see force as necessary if we per- petuate the status quo." By conducting negotiations that respect the interests of both sides, Whiting says the United States can avoid totally abandoning Taiwan, a development to which other Asian allies would react unfavorably. 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