Your
children's charm
connection...
policy should be codified, so
there is "no doubt in the
future" about the scope of
the State Department pro-
' gram. "There should be no
confusion on this," he said.
Many members of Con-
gress have been concerned of
late not only about finding
terrorists once they commit
deadly acts, but also about
why the terrorists are allow-
ed to enter the country in the
first place.
After a series of terrorist
incidents including the
bombing of the World Trade
Center in New York and
, shootings near the Central
Intelligence Agency head-
) quarters in northern
Virginia earlier this year,
members of Congress and
administration officials are
in accord that the system by
which U.S. Embassy per-
sonnel screen visa ap-
• plicants needs to be changed.
' In hearings last week
before a House subcom-
mittee, State Department of-
ficials testified about anti-
quated equipment and le-
Members of
Congress and
administration
officals are in
accord that the
system needs to
be changed.
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nient procedures that enable
terrorists and those linked to
terrorism to enter the
United States.
There has been particular
concern about how Sheik
Omar Abdel Rahman, the
now-notorious blind Muslim
cleric tied to the suspects in
the World Trade Center
bombing and the plot to blow
up New York targets,
entered the country.
State Department Inspec-
tor General Sherman Funk,
who testified last week along
with Assistant Secretary of
State for Consular Affairs
Mary Ryan, said the
department was reviewing
its policies.
Rep. Charles Schumer,
D-N.Y., a member of the
House Foreign Affairs sub-
committee on international
security, which held the
hearings, said in a state-
ment that the department's
current policy of "not
automatically barring a
member of a terrorist group
is simply ludicrous." 0
A Native
American Tragedy.
AND HIS
._ 4
....
ra
At 3: A.M. on April 30th, an
arson-fire gutted the Detroit
Indian Health Center.
For years, this facility had served more
than 10,000 native people in Southeastern
Michigan (and Western Ontario) and helped
meet their primary medical, dental,
community outreach, substance abuse
prevention and other health needs.
Hardest hit by this loss — the very young,
and very old.
Combo • Big Band
TO HELP:
Money for emergency medical help may
be sent to "American Indian Health and
Family Services — Southeastern Michi-
gan, Inc. (Fire Fund)" at our temporary
location: 4798 Lonyo, Detroit, MI
48210. To donate much needed medical
supplies, contact Lucy Harrison at
(313) 846-3718. All donations are tax
deductible (#51-0178120).
MINOMAADZWIN
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Southeastern Michigan, Inc.
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But the real tragedy is this: available insur-
ance only covered a fraction of the loss.
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