Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, July 26, 1977 Lance denies improprieties WASHINGTON OP) - Budget director Bert Lance denied un- der oath yesterday any wrong- doing in connection with his purchase of stock in the Atlan- ta bank he once headed. Sena- tors who questioned him about it said he has been "smeared." Lance appeared before the Senate Governmental Opera- tions Committee, as his trustee in Atlanta made it known that Lance's 200,000 shares in the National Bank of Georgia, now held in a blind trust, may be sold as early as tomorrow. THAT STEP would relieve Lance of his most pressing problem: The need to avoid any appearance of a conflict of in- terest between his bank stock and his government duties. Lance had asked for an ex- tension of the Dec. 31 deadline by which he had promised to sell the stock, Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, (D-Conn.), chairman of the committee, said he would wait to see whether or not the sale goes through. After hearing Lance's expla- nation, the committee called off idwest's Lorqest Selection * EuropeanChres Conodion and U.S. rm$289 CALL 769-1776 Cirre OC" any further investigation of its own. AT THE WHITE HOUSE, Deputy Press Secretary Rex Granum said President Carter "does hope that -all the facts will be brought out" about Lance's financial position and that he retains "full confi- dence" in Lance. All senators who questioned Lance expressed satisfactiofi at his explanations. But the U. S. Comptroller of the Currency still has to report on an inquiry into a $3.4 million loan Lance obtained from a Chicago bank with which the National Bank of Georgia had deposited a non- interest - bearing $50,000 "cor- respondent" account. Lance said there was never a "quid pro quo" understanding involved in the granting of what he called "a straightforward, good business loan." LANCE SAID the account has not been dormant, as had been alleged, but has fluctuated from a low of $37,000 last winter to a high of about $200,000 in the period after he left the Geor- gia bank. Committee members did in- dicate they will take a close look at the eventual purchas- er of Lance's stock to make sure that the purchase does not constitute a potential conflict of interest. But the senators were virtu- ally unanimous in telling Lance they believe his explanations under oath have "cleared the air" and restored his "pre- sumption of innocense." LANCE'S APPEARANCE was prompted by recent newspaper allegations concerning his fi- nancial dealings before enter- ing the Carter Administration as director of the Office of Management and Budget. Ribicoff told Lance that bad- ed on the evidence so far, he believes those allegations are all unwarranted. He said that in the post Watergate era, in- vestigative reporters are "out to get everybody" because "that's the name of the game." "You've been smeared from one end of the country to the other, in my feeling, unjustly," Ribicoff said. Interesting facts Tripoli declared war on the United States on June 10, 1801, after the U.S. refused to give added tribute to commerce- raiding corsairs. Delaware was the first of the original 13 states to ratify the Constitution. Rhode Island was the last. The first military heliport was at Ft. Eustis, Va. It was dedicated December 7, 1954. A neurosis is a conflict in the mind of a fundamentally heal- thy person; a psychosis repre- sents a distortion in the per- sonality. The words Muslim and Islam are forms of the Arabic verb salama, which means to submit -- in this case, to the will of God The Michelson interfero- meter, invented in 1881, is a device to measure light wave lengths to an accuracy of a mil- lionth of an inch. Wec're telling 44 milen pissners in the United States hw ts escape. AP Photo Federal Budget Director Bert Lance waits to testify before the Senate Government Affairs Committee yesterday. The Senators were satisfied with Lance's explanation of his pur- chase of 200,000 shares of the Atlanta Bank as businesslike and proper. Judge OK's Kent State gym on site of shooting KENT, Ohio {1)} - A judge N E A RLY 2 0 demonstra- favot of Kent State. ruled yesterday at Kent State tors were arrested earlier this - A b o u t 50 demonstrators University can proceed irnme- month when they refused to marched in front of the cam- diately with construction of a break up a tent city on the site pus police station, demanding $16 million gymnasium annex where four students were killed the return of tents and other near the site of the 1970 Nation- during an antiwar protest. on belongings taken by police who al Guard shootings. May 4, 1970. dismantled their "Tent City" Portage County Common last week. Pleas CountyJudge Joseph As the judge issued his rul- The protesters said construc- Kainrad issued an injunction ing, protesters were demonstra- tion ofthe facility would make ordering protesters to end all ting on the campus and threat- it impossible for the site to be interference in the university's ening to resume their camp-in preserved as a memorial to the plans. protest if the judge ruled in slain students. National phone strike looms WASHINGTON (A) - Tele- phone workers gave union leaders overwhelming approval THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXvII, No. 51-S Tuesday, July 26, 1977 is edited and managed by students st te Usiverstty at Michigan. News phone 764-052. Second class postsge paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Ounday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April 2 semes- ters; $S by maii outside Ann arcbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside An Arbor. yesterday to call a nationwide strike against the Bell System. A formal strike date was left to union leaders to decide, but a walkout could come as early as midnight Aug. 6, when cur- contracts expire. "WE WANT a settlement, not a strike," said President Glenn Watts of the Communications Workers of America (CWA). "But the situation is very seri- ous and it's getting very late." He said the 6-1 margin by which a strike was authorized "makes it clear that our mem- bers ... are ready to walk out if that action becomes neces- sary." The CWA, which represents 500,000 Bell System employes, is the largest union involved in the negotiations and the pat- tern-setter. Also taking part are the International Brother- hood of Electrical Workers, rep- resenting about 120,000 em- ployes, and agroup of smaller unions with about 70,000 mem- bers. THE UNIONS last week re- jected as inadequate the com- pany's initial offer of a new three - year contract providing a 1 per cent wage increase and additional 10-per cent in cost of livina raises. For a free booklet on how to stop smoking, call or write your local unit of the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY