The.Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI I, No. 55-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, July 30, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages LYON DEFINES HER ROLE Counselor explores 'U' maze By RON DeKETT The University has added two women to the payroll-one Asian American and one Native American-to fully staff the minority student services located on the second floor of the Michigan Union. The hirings are one of the final steps the University must take as it phases out the Minority Advocacy Program and activates the new Minority Student Ser- vices Program. ANN LIU LYONS, 39, entered her position as the Asian American mem- ber of the Minority Services team July 11. Lyons is a petite woman with a re- laxed, open (presence. She is articu- late, her voice is soft and she looks people in the eyes when she listens and talks. , She first became aware of the pro- gram when her parents told her of an ad in the newspaper. She talked with Thomas Moorehead, director of Com- munity Services and when the job was offered, slTe accepted. "I like meeting people," Lyons said. "I felt that my background, training and experience would fit the position." THOUGH ONLY in the University for two weeks Lyons has been busy meet- ing with department heads and putting out feelers to check the pulse of the University. "My immediate goal is to find out what both the administration and the stsjients see as having occurred in the past. What trends they see and then go from there," she said. "It is too presumptious to say now I am going to do this and this and that without knowing what has happened in the past," she explained. Lyons was born in Ann Arbor, spent eight years in grade school here and was an undergraduate student at the, University. She has extensive back- ground in counseling including working as volunteer at the Crisis Walk-In Cen- ter in Ann Arbor and a counselor for Youth for Understanding. She taught See MINORITY, Page 5 Lyons Judge blcks Kent State gym KENT, Ohio (At) - A federal judge ordered a halt yesterday V to construction of a building near the spot where four Kent State University students were killed by Nitional Guardsmen during a 4970 antiwar demonstration. . The order came several hours after more than 60 demonstra- " ;.; tors were arrested when they tried to prevent the ground break- ing for a gymnasium annex. A bulldozer moved in and started tearing up the earth after the protesters were removed. LATE YESTERDAY, U. S. District Judge Thomas Lambros in Cleveland ordered the bulldozer, giant drills and bulky earth- - 9 mover idled until another judge could listen to public arguments f on the construction. ,n Sixmembers of the group opposing the construction, includ- ing Alan Canfora, one of nine persons wounded in the antiwar demonstration seven years ago, had asked the judge to halt con- struction. The six had sought a temporary restraining order to suspend } Ff;any alterations on the hill from which National Guardsmen fired ':on students until the U. S. Department of Interior decides whether to declare the scene a National Historic Landmark. See JUDGE, Page 4 d Thick-headed'thief thwarts own heist By M. ILEEN DALEY A young man's attempt to rob the Campus branch of the Huron Valley National Bank of about $200 yesterday morning didn't quite pa-nut. In fact, the man ended up covered with red dye, breathing tear gas, smashing his car into a van, and not getting away with a dime. F y '"It'was not a very well thought out crime," said branch ., .:, r manager Mark QUimet. CITY POLICE are holding a young man in custody for arraignment tomorrow night, but are withholding his name pending authorization. lie will be charged with "larceny in a building" with a possible maximum sentence of four years. According to the police and bank sources, the man entered the bank, apparently intending to make a withdrawal from his savings account. The withdrawal from the teller's cash drawer was apparently a spur of the moment decision, sources said. After Noel Daniels, the teller, began processing the with- draiavul, the unarmed man reached across the counter in the center of the bank, and into Daniels' cash drawer. The thief grabbed a wrapped package of ten dollar bills from the drawer and fled the building, leaving his withdrawal slip (complete with his name and address) with the teller. THE MONEY stolen was apparently rigged with an anti- theft device, activated when the man left the bank and got See ROBBER, Page S STUDENTS RALLY to protest a new gym near the site where four Kent State students were killed seven years ago.