araa 1.ne 1 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY weanewuy, jul liv it ,iwosatww;. - - ta .-ata e, CIJis R1 Sa n 37Q-S sv r90 ) - 1/iys9~t., j o s s. t!\I! Its f G'tt,' r } rrt! j~ ,1 -7r 02oo t!29ND LA ..-"--,^_. .. tr"7mP'A' t R O E & ~ nC it .t...", ,+Qt !l.- ... "''....- -^...'_ rr 5 G f t f 'si H ,??.1 rr . " . Cnrn l b $ ,, , 9 r< 48957S A.. e P ox005? GZ' P Q~d O N r > sr 3g '6, a t t 5 1 O f f- ? x GP M .f" tA r SFiR."AY A. BO 9 t C'.1 it r5 '. S / . 3 -ri6} rJ .. r= MIC HA So th t H?.,"JtC v^ :r , R } C.P O D Ci 1Oq lrw n F ,,6'INP ti 0iNt h Co-1QY.n q f , tUK A ESW SS O CL pt 3 t O s ~J SD N I41A 1 '0 '7i ,,r p s } G k t 1 « f r f r r o J t . , S A G I N AW0 , A D A Y L N 1 6 >' 'gym %;;:{ t { : 'C y \: "r ,y's,. ; . y1 ' lt i ! V 7h , ~i yy7yy4L :fv r s Page Three Drinking bill OK'd LANSING (UPI)-Legislation raising Michigan's legal drinking age to 19 won overwhelming approval yesterday in the state Senate. Two bills sponsored by Sen. James DeSana (D-Wyandotte) that represent Michigan's first major revision of the 1972 Age of Majority Act were sent to the House by margins of 33-3 and 32-3. THE 1972 LAW granted full majority rights to 18-year-olds, 4ncluding the privilege of drinking alcoholic beverages. Senate members were swayed, however, by testimony from school officials indicating that teenaged drinking has led to serious disciplinary problems in Michigan's high schools. There were also indications that teenage involvement in traffic accidents has been 'on the increase since 1972. Those statistics, however, were disputed by the liquor industry and by some state officials. THE LEGISLATION would apply only to persons who become See STATE, Page 7 Med examiner calls VA deaths murder f: Y : ti : j.'; :; ; r+i ; i Rr ':f,: :; i r' T 0 J i .F Lawyers plead a By TIM YAGLE So you say you've just been hit by a car and you want -to press charges. Maybe your cousin's in jail for not paying up those old parking tickets. Or perhaps you're just shop- ping for a good family lawyer. Well, thanks to a law passed eariler this year Michigan residents need look no farther -for customers By KEITH B. RICHBURG Special To The Daily DETROIT-A New York City medical examiner whose spe- cialty is investigating deaths due to poisoning, believes that two Veterans, Administration (VA) hospital patients who suffered respiratory failures during the summer of 1975 were murdered. Dr. Michael Baden gave his opinion to the jury yesterday, as the VA murder trial conclud- ed its second month of testi- mony. Baden, New York City's depu- ty chief medical examiner, has personally p e r f a r m e d "well more than 10,000 autopsies and assisted in 40,000 others." He testified that the deaths of pa- tients John Herman and Joseph Brown were "compatible with muscle relaxants." "MY OPINION as to Mr. Her- man's cause of death," Baden said, "is that it is due to acute Pavulon poisoning due to the unauthorized administration of the drug Pavulon." Baden said that the cause of death for Joseph Brown was the same -"acute Pavulon poison- ing" from "unauthorized admin- istration" of the powerful mus- cle-relaxant. John Herman, a 73 year old double amputee, was admitted to the VA on July 23, and was found dead seven days later. Joseph Brown, an 83 year old diabetic, was found dead on August 15, the night of four other mysterious breathing fail- ures at the VA. Regarding a third patient, Adam Olberg, Baden would only say that he died "of. a respira- tory arrest." "I CANNOT, with the same degree of medical certainty, give the reason for the respiratory arrest," Baden said, because of "the nature in which he (Olberg) died." Olberg, 59, was transferred to the VA from Saginaw on the 30th of July. Legally blind, emaciated, and missing his toes from a bout with gangerine, 01- berg stopped breathing on Aug- ust 14 and survived for about ten days afterwards. Last month, Olberg's primary physi- cian testified that the patient had been "on a downhill course" See MED, Page 11 Wman raped near Law JFQuad A 23-year-old Ann Arbor wo- man was raped Saturday morn- ing at approximately 3 a.m. be- hind the Law Quad. Police said the woman was on S. Univer- sity near"E. University when a man grabbed her by the hair and proceeded to "slap her around". The man then forced her to go behind the Law Qupd. Police are withholding addi- tional information pending fur- ther investigation. than the Yellow Pages. In recent months rather dignified advertisements for members of the legal profession have begun to creep into the phone directory, b u m'p i n g right up against pitches for lawn furniture and sewer cleaning services. ON JANUARY 17, Michigan became the first state to allow lawyers to advertise in their office windows and put more information in. their Yellow Pages ads. rJ J'eM E 't: .i {;:;:t": ;A^e; '^..;:J.;y't;:".."t.:.,.,....^"': :'; ;{,,;i{ :.":i;:::?}::% : The new ruling permits lawyers to place up to a quarter-page ad in the Yellow Pages. The ad can include biographical and educational data, office hours, location, directions and the initial consulting fee if there is one. Consumer, groups hope the advertisement of consultation fees will encourage competition among law r firms for prospective clients.° TO MOST local attorneys passage of the law came as no surprise. But few have taken ad- vantage of it yet, choosing to wait for the reac- tion of their parent organization, the AmericanR Bar Association (ABA). Ann Arbor attorney John Toomey said her was "a little squeamish" about the newly- expanded freedom of advertising. Toomey said his firm would probably takeb a vote of its-members about whether or not to See LAWYERS, Page 7 :y~ ;:f% .:.; }.::r,..:::hr}:C;"",r.;. ~s.'":"?~'r",Y;;'~;.'r:{i'{r%5;;.:.. , -TODAY From Nero to Byrd? As the most accomplished country fiddler in the U. S. Senate, Robert Byrd, finds that his services are much in demand. But would the Democratic majority leader play at a Republican fund-raising dinner? It could happen. First the Republicans and then the Democrats held big fuid-raising dinners in Washington in recent weeks. The day before the Democratic dinner, Byrd mentioned on the Senate floor that he "may be asked to play a tune or two on my violin." Then he added, "I do not know why I wasn't asked to attend last Thursday's function" (the GOP dinner) to play my violin. It is a nonparti- san violin. It knows no political party. It plays just as well for Republican ears as it does for Demo- cratic hearts." To which Sen. Howard Baker, the minbrity leader, replied, "I envy the majority leader his great talent ... and I assure him that on the next Republican occasion we will solicit his aid and assistance in regaling our audience with his renditions." The next day, hours before the Demo-. cratic dinner, Baker offered .one final comment: "I hope my Democratic colleagues tonight, as they watch the performance of the distinguished major- ity leader, are not reminded that he is fiddling while the party burns." 0 Happenings ... are svelte today, but here goes, an exhibition of works by area artists called Photographic Group Seven will start at 9 a.m. at the Union Gallery, the show runs until June 30 . . . and at 7:30 p.m., the Ann Arbor Supporters of the United Farm Work- ers will meet on the fourth floor of the Union, enjoy . . . Deep in the darkest jungles .. . Maurice Hopkins' search for a very special lion has taken him into the deepest, darkest and dust- iest recesses of London's antique stores, but as yet the safari has yielded no sign of the lion that killed Hopkins' uncle in 1894. Why is he looking for a lion in an antique store, you ask? Simple, the lion is stuffed. The family tale began in 1894 along the shores of Lake Nyasa, which now divides Malawi and Mozambique. Hopkins' uncle, Dr. Elrington Mc- Kay, was out hunting one day when he and the golden beast tangled. McKay, although mortally wounded, managed to shoot the lion. When he died a few days later, the dead jungle cat was stuffed, sent back to England, and lost. The maneater has become something of a holy grail to McKay's de- scendants, who have been searching for the lion for over 30 years. Another uncle of Hopkins' learned of the lion's whereabouts during World War II, but lost track of the stuffed animal before the family could buy it. On the outside We've all been wondering when this idyllic cli- mate would change, 'and the time is now. Today's high of 69 ought to bring us all abruptly back to reality, and cloudy skies with morning rain will be the icing on the cake, so to speak. The low tonight will be in the upper 40's, so go get all those blankets you put away for the summer, you're going to need them.