The Michigan Dal Drug offic future unce Bourne's ri WASHINGTON (AP) - The future of Dr. Peter Bourne's office in the White House remained uncertain yesterday after the presidential drug abuse ad- viser's abrupt resignation. At the daily White House news briefing yesterday, presidential spokesman Jody Powell said "I'm not in a position to give you guidance" on whether the health adviser's office would be dismantled. BOURNE, A 38-year-old psychiatrist and close friend of President Carter, resigned his $51,000-a-year post as White House health adviser on Thur- sday, about four hours before the President was to hold a nationally broadcast news conference. For nearly 24 hours before his resignation, Bourne had been em- broiled in controversy over his ad- mission that he wrote a prescription for the much-abused sedative Quaalude to a fictitious name. The prescription actually was for Bourne's administrative aide, Ellen Metsky, and Bourne said he used a phony name on the form in order to protect her privacy. Metsky said she gave the prescription to a friend, Toby Long, 20, to have it filled. WHEN LONG tried to fill the prescription in a suburban Virginia drug store she was arrested on a charge of trying to obtain a controlled drug "by fraud, deceit or misrepresentation." Authorities in suburban Prince Non-conformist AP Phot William County, Va., are continuing an This young, unidentified member of the Small World Entertainers, a Salt Lake investigation of the incident. group, apparently has decided early in life that you get noticed when you're Powell also said he had no knowledge erent. of any use of marijuana or cocaine by members of the White House staff. e e . South African officials penalize 12 for deaths of three blacks ily-Saturday, July 22, 1978-Page 7 e's rtain after esignation Published reports Friday quoted Bour- ne as saying there was a "high inciden- ce" of marijuana use among White House workers and occasional use of cocaine. "I HAVE no way of knowing" whether that is true, Powell said. He said the White House is not conducting an investigation of drug use by White House employees. Powell also said he was not aware of any treatment given by Bourne to members of Carter's family. And, in response to an inquiry, Mrs. Carter's press secretary, Mary Hoyt, said Bour- ne "never" treated the first lady. Carter had been asked at his news conference Thursday whether Bourne had treated him or his family. Carter responded that Bourne hadn't treated him, but did not mention whether Bour- ne had treated Mrs. Carter or other family members. AT YESTERDIAY'S briefing, Powell said the acting head of Bourne's office, formally named the Office of the Special Assistant to the President for llealth Issues, will be Charles O'Keeffe, :37. O'Keeffe was . still answering the telephone yesterday by saying "Dr. Bourne's office." O'Keeffe declined to answer questions, and referred a reporter to the White House press office for biographical details about himself. However, no biography was available in the press office. At the briefing, Powell declined to answer any questions about the events leading up to Bourne's resignation. 'He would not say when Carter first learned of Bourne's legal problem. He said he usually answered such questions about "decisions of state" but that the Hourne case is "very per- sonal." Metsky remains on the White House staff, Powell said. City diff PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) - South African authorities investigating the separate deaths of three black men in police custody have ordered six policemen to be tried for murder, three security officers transferred to new posts and three other policemen suspended from duty. Amid allegations that two of the vic- tims died from beatings under in- terrogation, the latest deaths have proved embarrassing for Police Minister Jimmy Kruger who last year pledged new measures protecting detainees. A security police commander who played a key role in the Steve Biko af- fair was one of those "transferred" from his Port Elizabeth station in southeastern South Africa following another detainee's death on July 10, national police commissioner Mike Geldenhuys announced here Friday. Black consciousness leader Biko died of brain injuries last September after being moved to Pretoria from Port Elizabeth where he was first detained and questioned. The summary transfer of Col. Pieter Goosens and two other Port Elizabeth security officers follows a departmen- tal investigation into the death of 20- year-old Lungile Tabalaza, who plungedf f teourth ithfloorpf are-tet hoie f -eer blasazakwas arrested-,w't.W ~'lrs we before as suspects in gasoline bomb at- tacks on delivery trucks. The shakeup in the security forces was announced as two more blacks were reported to have died in police custody since the death of Tabalaza on July 10. In Bloemfontein, the provincial capital of Orange Free State, six policemen and two civilians were charged with murder following the belatedly disclosed death in detenltion of a black commercial security guard last March 19. Another police officer was chargedwith assault. Three white sergeants, four black constables and two white civilians are alleged to have killed Jankie Matobako, 25, arrested with four other black men a week earlier on suspicion of burglary. In the eastern province of Natal, two white and one black policemen were suspended pending criminal in- vestigation into the July 13 death of 22- year-old Paulos Ncane, a carpenter convicted of theft who was awaiting sentence in Hluhluwe police station. He died in a hospital of kidney collapse in the nearby resort of Empangeni amid claims by a doctor he had been the vic- tim of "systematic torture." Hospital staffers said that before he died Ncane told doctors and his mother, Lina Ncane, that he had been strung ,upb thew ed bear ten'with thip- ssic8 0tadr~q.ia fo, make him reveal where he had hidden $11,845 stolen from a livestock dealer's car. In both the cases of Ncane and Matobako, doctors reported the prisoners' bodies were covered with welts, cuts and massive swellings. According to government statistics, 92 prisoners other than political detainee died in 1975, 117 in 1976 and 128 in 1977. Until now it has been primarily security detainees, those held under South African laws permitting unlimited detention without trial, whose deaths have attracted inter- national notice. The private testimony of' prisoners has indicated far more widespread mistreatment of both political and criminal prisoners than police figures indicate. THE INFAMOUS CULT CLASSIC PINK FLAMINGOS Starring DIVINE, JOHN WATERS' tour-de-farts is probably one of the most vile and repugnant films to be shown on a national scale. Makes Peckinpah look like Disney and Johnny Rotten like Johnny Denver. A must-see film if there ever was one. Rated PF-Pure Fifth. Sun: Murnou's NOSFERATU (FREE of 7:30 only) CINEMA GUILD OLD ARCH. AUD. TONIGHT at 7:30 & 9:30 $150 MOONGLOW PRODUCTIONS presents ART FAIR EXRAVAGANZA FRIDAY, JULY 21-9:00-1:30 am A DANCE PARTY with DICK SIEGEL and his amazineg MINISTERS OF MELODY SATURDAY, JULY 22-9:00-1:30 am MOTOWN REVUE with the tabelous LONNIE JACKSON GROUP dltaP FULL BAR-Come dance the night away aocn MICHIGANtUNION BALLROOM STATEST.aS. UNIV SI