Page 12-Sunday, January 13, 1980-The Michigan Daily j CHANCES SLIM FOR 'MEET THE PRESS' DEBA TE Campaign rolls* (Continued from Page 1T ce may have been overlooked. announcement of the encounter at the But with the debate killed by Carter's United Auto Workers hall. withdrawal, the candidates looking for PARTYLEADERS were curious to exposure and the news medi4 hoping see the three candidates together after for a break in campaign routine, the days of sharp debate over Carter's im- $10-a-person dinner assumed a new position of a partial grain embargo to dimension. punish the Soviet Union for invading THE DINNER took place against a Afghanistan. backdrop of Kennedy-Carter campaign The dinner climaxed a week in which infighting that has split the Democratic Kennedy took his campaign for the par- Party in Iowa. ty's 1980 presidential nomination down As an example, the politically active to the farm to exploit fears that the em- UAW, which has a large membership in bargo would depress grain prices. Waterloo, played a key role in Carter's The. president sent his wife, 1976 campaign but has shifted loyalties Rosalynn, Agriculture Secretary Bob to Kennedy. Bergland and Mondale out in an attem- Waterloo also has been the site of bit- pt to persuade Iowans that the embargo ter disputes between Carter and Ken- was the most effective way to respond 'nedy, factions within the largest black to Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. community in Iowa. ORIGINALLY intended as an in- THE CROSS-CUTTING loyalties here nocuous fund-raising dinner, the three- are incredible," said one local party way appearance mushroomed into one leader. "I'm still surprised anyone of the major stops on the road to Iowa's agreed to show up." Jan. 21 caucuses. Kennedy wound up six days of exten- Had a Carter-Kennedy-Brown debate sive speechmaking with stops in five set for last Monday in Ds Moines come Iowa cities - Cedar Rapids, Mason off as scheduled, last night's appearan- City, Sioux City, Des Moines and without Carter Bert Lance to face fraud trial tomorrow Waterloo. In each place,he implored his audience yesterday to attend the caucuses because, "Where you stand in that caucus may very well make a dif- ference about the future of this coun- try." IN ADEL, IOWA, Rosalynn Carter appealed to Iowans to support the Soviet grain embargo, saying "A united America is the most powerful force in the world." A Des Moines Register poll this week of Iowa Democrats showed Carter leading Kennedy 57 to 25 per cent with only four per cent for Brownand the rest undecided. Last month, the newspaper's poll showed 40 per cent for Carter, 40 per cent for Kennedy and eight per cent for Brown. In August, Kennedy led Carter by 49 per cent to 26 per cent. Brown was not included. Women eye private buses (Continued from Page 1)' be operated entirely by women, and trying to expand it would require much time without certainty that the project would ever be approved, Januszewski said. In addition, she said, it would mean dependence on AATA. "With the women's transit system we would be in more control of our, process," she added. ONE AREA LEFT to be examined is the route the transit system would cover. "I think ideally we want it to be for both University and non-University women," said Januszewski. But she added that a shortage of either funds or volunteers to run the operation and drive the vehicles could severely limit the area covered. Rice agreed on the goals of the project, but was pessimistic about the possibility of city-wide coverage. "We'd love to have it serve the whole community-but I don't think we have the resources at this time," she said. Although Januszewski acknowledged she isn't sure how long the planning and organization will take, she said she hopes a women's transit system can be in operation "at least by fall." ATLANTA (AP)-Bert Lance, the confidant of President Carter and a man once called the "deputy president," goes on trial tomorrow on bank fraud charges. Lance, 48, and three associates-Richard Carr, Thomas Mitchell and Jack Mullins-will be tried in federal court on charges of fraud and conspiracy in their business dealings between 1970 and 1978. Lance, a banker who was federal budget director for eight months in 1977, is charged in 22 of 33 counts in a bank fraud and conspiracy indictment. He could face a maximum sentence of 95 years plus $115,000 in fines if convic- ted on all charges. WHILE IN Washington, Lance had so much influence on President Carter that he was sometimes called the "deputy president." Lance, a towering 6 feet 5, often played tennis with Carter. The two had lunch together twice a week and talked on the telephone daily. Lance and his co-defendants have pleaded innocent to all charges. But controversy over Lance's banking practices forced his resignation on Sept. 21, 1977. When Carter announced his friend's departure, he was near tears. "I don't think there is any way that I could find anyone to replace Bert Lance that would be, in my judgment, as com- petent, as strong, as decent and as close to me as a friend and adviser," Carter said. LANCE, THE SON of the president of a small Methodist college, dropped out of the University of Georgia when he was 20 to support his wife, LaBelle, and their newborn child, the first of four sons. He officiated at high school foot- ball games to supplement his $90-a- month job in the Calhoun First National Bank, founded by his wife's grand- SOFTBALL An Organizational Meeting for all new women who are interested in. playing intercollegiate softball. DATE: Wednesday, Jan. 16th TIME: 4:00 pm PLACE: Athletic Adm. Bldg.' 1000 S. State St., Basement Classroom Lane ... 95-year maximum sentence father. By 1963, when he was 32, Lance and some associates had purchased contr( of the bank. Lance was named president. He increased the bank's assets sevenfold in seven years. Lance met Carter, then a state senator, in 1966. He rounded up business support for Carter's unsuc- cessful campaign for governor later that year. Carter ran again in 1970, with Lance's help, and won. Lance became head of the state highway department. WHEN CARTER left the governor' office in 1974, prohibited from seeking b second term, he supported Lance as a successor. But Lance finished third in the Democratic primary. The alleged financing of his guber- natorial campaign through overdrafts and unsecured loans is prominent among the charges against Lance and his three co-defendants, all of whom were involved in the campaign. SPAGHETTI SPECIAL LOME ______ GETIT!! All the Pasta you can eat for only $2.50 MONDAY Burrito Special a5 p..- l2 .m.. *"ly $1."s5 Cobo Arena doors smashed in rush for concert tickets DETROIT (UPI) - Six glass doors were shattered and a seventh ripped off its hinges early yesterday when about 2,000 young people stormed the Cobo Arena box office. Police said many of the youths had been waiting outside all night, enduring temperatures in the low teens, to buy tickets for the February concert of'the popular Canadian rock group "Rush." THE CROWD pushed through the doors after rumors circulated that there weren't enough tickets for everyone in line, police said. No one was injured. One person, a 21- year-old man, was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct. Fifty police officers were sent to the riverfront arena to restore order. . ./ r- -144% Kel \1 CI LN L11W.W r T. ....... 1) *: .''''' ' FEATURING THE MOST COMPLETE SEL- ECTION OF BRAND NAME ARTIST'S SUP- PLIES IN ANN ARBOR..... 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